Abstract
Despite relevance to pain chronicity, disease burden, and treatment, mechanisms of pain perception for different types of acute pain remain incompletely understood in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Building on experimental research across pain modalities, we herein addressed behavioral and neural correlates of visceral versus somatic pain processing in women with quiescent ulcerative colitis (UC) compared to irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) as a patient control group, and healthy women (HC). Thresholds for visceral and somatic pain were assessed with rectal distensions and cutaneous thermal pain, respectively. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, neural and behavioral responses to individually calibrated and intensity-matched painful stimuli from both modalities were compared. Pain thresholds were comparable across groups, but visceral thresholds correlated with gastrointestinal symptom severity and chronic stress burden exclusively within UC. Upon experience of visceral and somatic pain, both control groups demonstrated enhanced visceral pain-induced neural activation and greater perceived pain intensity, whereas UC patients failed to differentiate between pain modalities at both behavioral and neural levels. When confronted with acute pain from multiple bodily sites, UC patients' responses are distinctly altered. Their failure to prioritize pain arising from the viscera may reflect a lack of adaptive behavioral flexibility possibly resulting from long-lasting central effects of repeated intestinal inflammatory insults persisting during remission. The role of psychological factors, particularly chronic stress, in visceral sensitivity and disease-specific alterations in the response to acute pain call for dedicated mechanistic research as a basis for tailoring interventions for intestinal and extraintestinal pain symptoms in IBD.
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