作者mulkcs (mulkcs)
看板Cognitive
標題[新知] ScienceDaily-痛覺會被觸覺所抵?
時間Mon Sep 27 11:20:32 2010
ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2010) — There may be a very good reason that people
naturally clutch their hand after receiving an injury. A new report published
online Sept. 23 in Current Biology shows that self-touch offers significant
relief for acute pain under experimental conditions. The researchers suggest
that the relief comes from a change in the brain's representation of the rest
of the body.
"Pain is quite an important, but also complicated, experience and can be
caused in many different ways," said Patrick Haggard of University College
London. "We show that levels of acute pain depend not just on the signals
sent to the brain, but also on how the brain integrates these signals into a
coherent representation of the body as a whole."
Haggard and his colleague Marjolein Kammers, also of University College
London, made the discovery by studying the effects of self-touch in people
who were made to feel pain using an experimental condition known as the
thermal grill illusion (TGI). "The TGI is one of the best-established
laboratory methods for studying pain perception," Haggard explained. "In our
version, the index and ring fingers are placed in warm water and the middle
finger in cold water. This generates a paradoxical feeling that the middle
finger is painfully hot." That's ideal because it allows scientists to study
the experience of pain without actually causing any injury to those who
participate in the studies.
When TGI was induced in an individual's two hands and then the three fingers
of one hand were touched to the same fingers on the other hand immediately
afterwards, the painful heat experienced by the middle finger dropped by 64
percent compared to a condition without self-touch. That relief didn't come
when only one hand was placed under TGI conditions. Partial self-touch in
which only one or two fingers were pressed against each other didn't work
either. Nor did it work to press the affected hand against an experimenter's
hand that had also been warmed and cooled in the same way.
"In sum," the researchers wrote, "TGI was reduced only when thermosensory and
tactile information from all three fingers was fully integrated. That is, TGI
reduction required a highly coherent somatosensory pattern, including
coherence between tactile and thermal patterns and coherence of stimuli
between the two hands."
Haggard said that earlier studies of chronic pain had suggested the
importance of body representation in the experience of pain. For example, the
phantom pain that is often felt following amputation of a limb appears to
lessen with time as the brain converges on an updated representation of the
body. Haggard said the new findings extend the important role of body
representation to acute pain and may lead to a better understanding of the
brain mechanisms involved in chronic pain as well.
The findings might be put to practical use, the researchers say. "Our work
suggests that therapies aimed at strengthening the multisensory
representation of the body may be effective in reducing pain," Haggard said.
The researchers include Marjolein P.M. Kammers, Institute of Cognitive
Neuroscience, University College London, Alexandra House, London, UK;
Frederique de Vignemont, Institut Jean-Nicod, CNRS/EHESS/ENS, Paris, France;
Transitions NYU-CNRS, New York, NY; and Patrick Haggard, Institute of
Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, Alexandra House, London,
UK.
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網址:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/09/100923125111.htm
論文:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2010.08.038
很有趣的新聞,等等再來補充 XD
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