Effects of non-pharmacological pain treatments on brain states.

Category Primary study
JournalClinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
Year 2013
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OBJECTIVE:

To (1) evaluate the effects of a single session of four non-pharmacological pain interventions, relative to a sham tDCS procedure, on pain and electroencephalogram- (EEG-) assessed brain oscillations, and (2) determine the extent to which procedure-related changes in pain intensity are associated with changes in brain oscillations.

METHODS:

30 individuals with spinal cord injury and chronic pain were given an EEG and administered measures of pain before and after five procedures (hypnosis, meditation, transcranial direct current stimulation [tDCS], neurofeedback, and a control sham tDCS procedure).

RESULTS:

Each procedure was associated with a different pattern of changes in brain activity, and all active procedures were significantly different from the control procedure in at least three bandwidths. Very weak and mostly non-significant associations were found between changes in EEG-assessed brain activity and pain.

CONCLUSIONS:

Different non-pharmacological pain treatments have distinctive effects on brain oscillation patterns. However, changes in EEG-assessed brain oscillations are not significantly associated with changes in pain, and therefore such changes do not appear useful for explaining the benefits of these treatments.

SIGNIFICANCE:

The results provide new findings regarding the unique effects of four non-pharmacological treatments on pain and brain activity.
Epistemonikos ID: 501704d30371b4ef6e8e974f2591bf9af39e1551
First added on: Oct 27, 2016