A randomized pharmacological fMRI trial investigating d-cycloserine and brain plasticity mechanisms in learned pain responses

Open Access
Authors
  • M.A. Thomaidou
  • J.S. Blythe
  • D.S. Veldhuijzen
  • K.J. Peerdeman
  • J.P.A. van Lennep
  • E.J. Giltay
  • H.R. Cremers
  • A.W.M. Evers
Publication date 09-11-2022
Journal Scientific Reports
Article number 19080
Volume | Issue number 12
Number of pages 15
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Learning and negative outcome expectations can increase pain sensitivity, a phenomenon known as nocebo hyperalgesia. Here, we examined how a targeted pharmacological manipulation of learning would impact nocebo responses and their brain correlates. Participants received either a placebo (n = 27) or a single 80 mg dose of d-cycloserine (a partial NMDA receptor agonist; n = 23) and underwent fMRI. Behavioral conditioning and negative suggestions were used to induce nocebo responses. Participants underwent pre-conditioning outside the scanner. During scanning, we first delivered baseline pain stimulations, followed by nocebo acquisition and extinction phases. During acquisition, high intensity thermal pain was paired with supposed activation of sham electrical stimuli (nocebo trials), whereas moderate pain was administered with inactive electrical stimulation (control trials). Nocebo hyperalgesia was induced in both groups (p < 0.001). Nocebo magnitudes and brain activations did not show significant differences between d-cycloserine and placebo. In acquisition and extinction, there were significantly increased activations bilaterally in the amygdala, ACC, and insula, during nocebo compared to control trials. Nocebo acquisition trials also showed increased vlPFC activation. Increased opercular activation differentiated nocebo-augmented pain aggravation from baseline pain. These results support the involvement of integrative cognitive-emotional processes in nocebo hyperalgesia.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-23769-7
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85141458803 https://dans.knaw.nl/en/data-stations/life-health-and-medical-sciences/
Downloads
s41598-022-23769-7 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Permalink to this page
Back