感觉和情感之间的杏仁核:在疼痛中的作用。

Journal of molecular psychiatry Pub Date : 2013-06-05 eCollection Date: 2013-01-01 DOI:10.1186/2049-9256-1-9
Pierre Veinante, Ipek Yalcin, Michel Barrot
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引用次数: 233

摘要

杏仁核是颞叶的一个结构,被认为与赋予环境信息情感意义和触发适应性生理、行为和情感反应有关。大量关于动物和人类的文献表明杏仁核与恐惧有关。疼痛具有强烈的情感和情绪维度,杏仁核,特别是其中央核(CeA),在过去的二十年中也作为疼痛矩阵的关键元素出现。CeA接收来自脑干的多种伤害性信息,以及来自丘脑和大脑皮层的高度加工的多模态信息。它还拥有能够影响大多数下行疼痛控制系统的连接,以及涉及情感、情感和认知功能的高级中枢。临床前研究表明,CeA中伤害性输入的整合只对疼痛的感觉区分成分有很小的贡献,但对相关的行为和情感反应有很大的贡献。在基础状态下,CeA对急性痛觉的反应没有主要影响,但在应激或恐惧等厌恶状态下,它会引起痛觉减退。相反,在持续疼痛状态(炎症性、内脏性、神经性)中,CeA活性的长期功能可塑性有助于增强疼痛体验,包括痛觉过敏、厌恶行为反应和情感性焦虑样状态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The amygdala between sensation and affect: a role in pain.

The amygdala is a structure of the temporal lobe thought to be involved in assigning emotional significance to environmental information and triggering adapted physiological, behavioral and affective responses. A large body of literature in animals and human implicates the amygdala in fear. Pain having a strong affective and emotional dimension, the amygdala, especially its central nucleus (CeA), has also emerged in the last twenty years as key element of the pain matrix. The CeA receives multiple nociceptive information from the brainstem, as well as highly processed polymodal information from the thalamus and the cerebral cortex. It also possesses the connections that allow influencing most of the descending pain control systems as well as higher centers involved in emotional, affective and cognitive functions. Preclinical studies indicate that the integration of nociceptive inputs in the CeA only marginally contributes to sensory-discriminative components of pain, but rather contributes to associated behavior and affective responses. The CeA doesn't have a major influence on responses to acute nociception in basal condition, but it induces hypoalgesia during aversive situation, such as stress or fear. On the contrary, during persistent pain states (inflammatory, visceral, neuropathic), a long-lasting functional plasticity of CeA activity contributes to an enhancement of the pain experience, including hyperalgesia, aversive behavioral reactions and affective anxiety-like states.

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