The researchers found volunteers under
hypnosis experienced significant pain reduction in response to painful
heat. They also had a distinctly different pattern of brain activity
compared to when they were not hypnotised and experienced the painful
heat.The changes in brain activity suggest that
hypnosis somehow blocks the pain signal from getting to the parts of
the brain that perceives pain.
"The major finding from our study, which used fMRI for the first
time to investigate brain activity under hypnosis for pain suppression,
is that we see reduced activity in areas of the pain network and increased
activity in other areas of the brain under hypnosis," said Sebastian
Schulz-Stubner, M.D., Ph.D., UI assistant professor (clinical) of anaesthesia
and first author of the study.
"The increased activity might be specific for hypnosis or might
be non-specific, but it definitely does something to reduce the pain
signal input into the cortical structure."
The pain network functions like a relay
system with an input pain signal from a peripheral nerve going to the
spinal cord where the information is processed and passed on to the
brain stem. From there the signal goes to the mid-brain region and finally
into the cortical brain region that deals with conscious perception
of external stimuli like pain.
Processing of the pain signal through the lower parts of the pain network
looked the same in the brain images for both hypnotised and non-hypnotised
trials, but activity in the top level of the network, which would be
responsible for "feeling" the pain, was reduced under hypnosis.
Initially, 12 volunteers at the Technical University of Aachen had a
heating device placed on their skin to determine the temperature that
each volunteer considered painful (8 out of 10 on a 0 to 10 pain scale).
The volunteers were then split into two groups. One group was hypnotised,
placed in the fMRI machine and their brain activity scanned while the
painful thermal stimuli was applied. Then the hypnotic state was broken
and a second fMRI scan was performed without hypnosis while the same
painful heat was again applied to the volunteer's skin. The second group
underwent their first fMRI scan without hypnosis followed by a second
scan under hypnosis.
Hypnosis was successful in reducing pain perception for all 12 participants.
Hypnotised volunteers reported either no pain or significantly reduced
pain (less than 3 on the 0-10 pain scale) in response to the painful
heat.
Under hypnosis, fMRI showed that brain activity was reduced in areas
of the pain network, including the primary sensory cortex, which is
responsible for pain perception.
The imaging studies also showed increased activation in two other brain
structures -- the left anterior cingulate cortex and the basal ganglia.
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Need
to identify areas involved in hypnosis-induced pain reduction
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The researchers speculate that increased
activity in these two regions may be part of an inhibition pathway that
blocks the pain signal from reaching the higher cortical structures
responsible for pain perception. However, Schulz-Stubner noted that
more detailed fMRI images are needed to definitively identify the exact
areas involved in hypnosis-induced pain reduction, and he hoped that
the newer generation of fMRI machines would be capable of providing
more answers.
"Imaging studies like this one improve our understanding of what
might be going on and help researchers ask even more specific questions
aimed at identifying the underlying mechanism," Schulz-Stubner
said.
"It is one piece of the puzzle that moves us a little closer to
a final answer for how hypnosis really works.
"More practically, for clinical use, it helps to dispel prejudice
about hypnosis as a technique to manage pain because we can show an
objective, measurable change in brain activity linked to a reduced perception
of pain," he explained.
In addition to Schulz-Stubner, the research team included Timo Krings,
M.D., Ingo Meister, M.D., Stefen Rex, M.D., Armin Thron, M.D., Ph.D.
and Rolf Rossaint, M.D., Ph.D., from the Technical University
of Aachen, Germany.