Abstract
Increasing research points to a decline in the ability to internally regulate pain as a contributing factor to the increased pain susceptibility in aging. This study investigated the connection between pain regulation and resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) in older adults with chronic pain. We compared functional magnetic resonance imaging rsFC of 30 older adults with chronic pain (69.5 ± 6.58 years, 14 males), 29 pain-free older (70.48 ± 4.60, 15 males), and 30 younger adults (20.0 ± 1.58, 15 males). Pain inhibition and facilitatory capabilities were assessed using conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and temporal summation. Older adults with chronic pain displayed lower pain inhibition during the CPM than pain-free older and younger adults. rsFC analysis showed that older adults with chronic pain, in comparison with younger participants, displayed an abnormal hyperconnectivity between right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and left amygdala, which was significantly correlated with lower pain inhibition during the CPM. Older adults with chronic pain displayed higher connectivity between the primary somatosensory cortex and nucleus accumbens than pain-free older adults. Finally, both older adult groups displayed reduced connectivity between brain structures involved in pain inhibition and processing in comparison with younger adults. Altogether, our results suggest that suffering from pain during aging leads to a dysfunction of pain-inhibitory processes, which significantly surpass those caused by normal aging. Furthermore, our results point to a key role of emotional and motivational brain areas, and their interaction with executive and somatosensory areas, in the reduced inhibitory capacity and likely the maintenance of chronic pain in aging. PerspectiveThis study examines the link between reduced pain-inhibition capacity and increased resting-state connectivity between affective, sensory, and executive brain structures in older adults with chronic pain. These findings could inform new pain assessment and treatment programs for this population.
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