Abstract

Chronic pain pathologies, which are due to maladaptive changes in the peripheral and/or central nervous systems, are debilitating diseases that affect 20% of the European adult population. A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying this pathogenesis would facilitate the identification of novel therapeutic targets. Functional connectivity (FC) extracted from coherent low-frequency hemodynamic fluctuations among cerebral networks has recently brought light on a powerful approach to study large scale brain networks and their disruptions in neurological/psychiatric disorders. Analysis of FC is classically performed on averaged signals over time, but recently, the analysis of the dynamics of FC has also provided new promising information. Keeping in mind the limitations of animal models of persistent pain but also the powerful tool they represent to improve our understanding of the neurobiological basis of chronic pain pathogenicity, this study aimed at defining the alterations in functional connectivity, in a clinically relevant animal model of sustained inflammatory pain (Adjuvant-induced Arthritis) in rats by using functional ultrasound imaging, a neuroimaging technique with a unique spatiotemporal resolution (100 μm and 2 ms) and sensitivity. Our results show profound alterations of FC in arthritic animals, such as a subpart of the somatomotor (SM) network, occurring several weeks after the beginning of the disease. Also, we demonstrate for the first time that dynamic functional connectivity assessed by ultrasound can provide quantitative and robust information on the dynamic pattern that we define as brain states. While the main state consists of an overall synchrony of hemodynamic fluctuations in the SM network, arthritic animal spend statistically more time in two other states, where the fluctuations of the primary sensory cortex of the inflamed hind paws show asynchrony with the rest of the SM network. Finally, correlating FC changes with pain behavior in individual animals suggest links between FC alterations and either the cognitive or the emotional aspects of pain. Our study introduces fUS as a new translational tool for the enhanced understanding of the dynamic pain connectome and brain plasticity in a major preclinical model of chronic pain.

Highlights

  • Chronic pain pathologies, which are due to maladaptive changes in the peripheral and/or central nervous systems, are debilitating diseases that affect 20% of the European adult population

  • At three weeks post-induction of arthritis, which is a time point known to be characterized by chronic inflammatory pain[31,48], arthritic animals had a significant reduction in body weight gain, which is an indirect marker of sustained spontaneous pain

  • Study of resting state fMRI functional connectivity has provided a unique tool for the study of the intrinsic functional organization of the brain, and for the measure of network dysfunction in pathological conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic pain pathologies, which are due to maladaptive changes in the peripheral and/or central nervous systems, are debilitating diseases that affect 20% of the European adult population. Keeping in mind the limitations of animal models of persistent pain and the powerful tool they represent to improve our understanding of the neurobiological basis of chronic pain pathogenicity, this study aimed at defining the alterations in functional connectivity, in a clinically relevant animal model of sustained inflammatory pain (Adjuvantinduced Arthritis) in rats by using functional ultrasound imaging, a neuroimaging technique with a unique spatiotemporal resolution (100 μm and 2 ms) and sensitivity. While preclinical studies are focusing on defining molecular mechanisms underlying these persistent pain states in animal models of human pathologies, neuro-imaging studies in human are mainly focusing on the identification of brain areas activated by painful stimuli and their alterations in chronic pain states. Our study aimed at studying alterations of brain FC and brain states in a clinically-relevant animal model of chronic inflammatory pain, Adjuvant-Induced Arthritis (AIA), by using a new ultrasound-based neuroimaging technique, functional ultrasound (fUS) imaging. We showed that this technique can image functional connectivity[6] in a very reproducible manner in anesthetized animals

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