Abstract

Acute pain is a physiological response that causes an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience in the presence of actual or potential tissue injury. Anatomically and symptomatically, chronic pathological pain can be divided into three distinct but interconnected pathways, a lateral “painfulness” pathway, a medial “suffering” pathway and a descending pain inhibitory circuit. Pain (fullness) can exist without suffering and suffering can exist without pain (fullness). The triple network model is offering a generic unifying framework that may be used to understand a variety of neuropsychiatric illnesses. It claims that brain disorders are caused by aberrant interactions within and between three cardinal brain networks: the self-representational default mode network, the behavioral relevance encoding salience network and the goal oriented central executive network. A painful stimulus usually leads to a negative cognitive, emotional, and autonomic response, phenomenologically expressed as pain related suffering, processed by the medial pathway. This anatomically overlaps with the salience network, which encodes behavioral relevance of the painful stimuli and the central sympathetic control network. When pain lasts longer than the healing time and becomes chronic, the pain- associated somatosensory cortex activity may become functionally connected to the self-representational default mode network, i.e., it becomes an intrinsic part of the self-percept. This is most likely an evolutionary adaptation to save energy, by separating pain from sympathetic energy-consuming action. By interacting with the frontoparietal central executive network, this can eventually lead to functional impairment. In conclusion, the three well-known pain pathways can be combined into the triple network model explaining the whole range of pain related co-morbidities. This paves the path for the creation of new customized and personalized treatment methods.

Highlights

  • The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage,” or described in terms of such damage [1]

  • We propose extending the current pain networks to the triple network model to fill this gap

  • We propose that in chronic pain the three known pain pathways can be extended to the triple network model, which would explain chronification of pain as well as the commonly associated cognitive dysfunction

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage,” or described in terms of such damage [1]. Chronic pain is currently defined, based on temporal measures, as “pain that persists for longer than 3 months” [2–4], which extends beyond the period of healing of an acute injury. Chronic pain is considered an independent condition, lacking the acute warning function of physiological nociception [3]. Along with the pain itself, about 1/3 of the individuals with chronic pain present with other symptoms such as irritability, depression, anxiety, and sleep problems [5–7], as well as cognitive. Pain and Triple Network Model dysfunction, including problems of attention, learning, memory, and decision making [8]. These symptoms drive most of the morbidity, leading to increased physical and functional disability and poor quality of life [9]. New, innovative, evidenced-based, specific and safer therapies are highly needed for management of chronic pain. To develop more efficacious pain treatments a better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms that generate and maintain chronic pain is required

A Brief History of the Anatomy of Pain
Findings
CONCLUSION
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