Subgroups in Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia: FMRI Evidence for
Increased Pressure Pain Sensitivity

R.H. Gracely¹, F. Petzke², J.M. Wolf¹ and D.J. Clauw²
¹National Institutes of Health, Bethesda MD 20893 and ²Department of Medicine, Rheumatology
Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington D.C. 20037

INTRODUCTION: Fibromyalgia is characterized by subjective reports of increased tenderness and sensitivity to pressure stimuli suggestive of allodynia. We evaluated pain-evoked activity in brain structures produced by equally painful pressure in 21 patients meeting ACR criteria for Fibromyalgia and in 16 control subjects.

HYPOTHESIS: Subjectively equivalent painful stimulation, produced by significantly less pressure in patients, will produce similar patterns of cerebral activation in both groups.

PROCEDURES: a 1.5 Tesla EPI BOLD method acquires complete head volumes (50-alice, 3-mm cubic voxels) at 5-sec intervals. Thirty seconds of intensely painful stimuli (1-cm² probe applied to thumb) alternated with 30 sec of innocuous stimulation for 10 cycles.

SUMMARY OF RESULTS: Equally-painful stimuli significantly increased regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in common regions including contralateral primary/supplemental sensory cortex (SI/SSS, secondary somatosensory cortex/retro insular parietal operculum (SII, RI-PO), putamen, insular cortex, superior temporal gyrus (BA22,38) and ipsilateral anterior cerebellum. Stimuli of similar physical intensities activated similar regions in insular cortex. Painful stimulation in patients resulted in significantly less activation in regions of bilateral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), caudate nucleus and thalamus, and increased activation in a specific region of ipsilateral caudate.

CONCLUSIONS: Activation of similar regions by equally-painful (although different intensity) stimuli suggests a cortical or subcortical amplification. Activation of similar regions in the insula in all conditions is consistent with multi-modality processing observed in previous functional imaging of supraspinal pain activation. The relative lack of response of thalamus and caudate in patients is consistent with previous results showing tonic reduced activity in these structures in patients. The reduced patient response in ACC is not consistent with previous findings of increased ACC activity in patients. Additional studies are needed to confirm and extend these findings.

KEYWORDS: Pain, neuroimaging, mechanisms

This work in the abstract was supported in part by a grant from the National Fibromyalgia Research Association.

Presented at the National Fibromyalgia Research Association's Subgroups in Fibromyalgia Symposium, September 26-27, 1999, in Portland, Oregon.


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