» Articles » PMID: 29251663

Pain or Nociception? Subjective Experience Mediates the Effects of Acute Noxious Heat on Autonomic Responses

Overview
Journal Pain
Specialties Neurology
Psychiatry
Date 2017 Dec 19
PMID 29251663
Citations 25
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Nociception reliably elicits an autonomic nervous system (ANS) response. Because pain and ANS circuitry interact on multiple spinal, subcortical, and cortical levels, it remains unclear whether autonomic responses are simply a reflexive product of noxious stimulation regardless of how stimulation is consciously perceived or whether the experience of pain mediates ANS responses to noxious stimulation. To test these alternative predictions, we examined the relative contribution of noxious stimulation and individual pain experience to ANS responses in healthy volunteers who underwent 1 or 2 pain assessment tasks. Participants received 8 seconds of thermal stimulation of varied temperatures and judged pain intensity on every trial. Skin conductance responses and pupil dilation responses to stimulation served as measures of the heat-evoked autonomic response. We used multilevel modelling to examine trial-by-trial relationships between heat, pain, and ANS response. Although both pain and noxious heat stimulation predicted skin conductance response and pupil dilation response in separate analyses, the individual pain experience statistically mediated effects of noxious heat on both outcomes. Furthermore, moderated mediation revealed that evidence for this process was stronger when stimulation was perceived as painful compared with when stimulation was perceived as nonpainful. These findings suggest that pain appraisal regulates the heat-evoked autonomic response to noxious stimulation, documenting the flexibility of the autonomic pain response to adjust to perceived or actual changes in environmental affordances above and beyond nociceptive input.

Citing Articles

Nav1.8, an analgesic target for nonpsychotomimetic phytocannabinoids.

Ghovanloo M, Tyagi S, Zhao P, Waxman S Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025; 122(4):e2416886122.

PMID: 39835903 PMC: 11789019. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2416886122.


From facial expressions to algorithms: a narrative review of animal pain recognition technologies.

Chiavaccini L, Gupta A, Chiavaccini G Front Vet Sci. 2024; 11:1436795.

PMID: 39086767 PMC: 11288915. DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1436795.


Machines, mathematics, and modules: the potential to provide real-time metrics for pain under anesthesia.

Peng K, Karunakaran K, Green S, Borsook D Neurophotonics. 2024; 11(1):010701.

PMID: 38389718 PMC: 10883389. DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.11.1.010701.


Sodium currents in naïve mouse dorsal root ganglion neurons: No major differences between sexes.

Ghovanloo M, Tyagi S, Zhao P, Effraim P, Dib-Hajj S, Waxman S Channels (Austin). 2023; 18(1):2289256.

PMID: 38055732 PMC: 10761158. DOI: 10.1080/19336950.2023.2289256.


Nociception in Chicken Embryos, Part II: Embryonal Development of Electroencephalic Neuronal Activity as a Prerequisite for Nociception.

Kollmansperger S, Anders M, Werner J, Saller A, Weiss L, Suss S Animals (Basel). 2023; 13(18).

PMID: 37760239 PMC: 10525651. DOI: 10.3390/ani13182839.


References
1.
Kenny D, Korchmaros J, Bolger N . Lower level mediation in multilevel models. Psychol Methods. 2003; 8(2):115-28. DOI: 10.1037/1082-989x.8.2.115. View

2.
Willer J . Anticipation of pain-produced stress: electrophysiological study in man. Physiol Behav. 1980; 25(1):49-51. DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(80)90181-x. View

3.
LANZETTA J, Kleck R . Effects of nonverbal dissimulation on emotional experience and autonomic arousal. J Pers Soc Psychol. 1976; 33(3):354-70. DOI: 10.1037//0022-3514.33.3.354. View

4.
Russell J, Barrett L . Core affect, prototypical emotional episodes, and other things called emotion: dissecting the elephant. J Pers Soc Psychol. 1999; 76(5):805-19. DOI: 10.1037//0022-3514.76.5.805. View

5.
Coghill R, Sang C, Maisog J, Iadarola M . Pain intensity processing within the human brain: a bilateral, distributed mechanism. J Neurophysiol. 1999; 82(4):1934-43. DOI: 10.1152/jn.1999.82.4.1934. View