Authors
Adam J Krause, Aric A Prather, Tor D Wager, Martin A Lindquist, Matthew P Walker
Publication date
2019/3/20
Journal
Journal of Neuroscience
Volume
39
Issue
12
Pages
2291-2300
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Description
Sleep loss increases the experience of pain. However, the brain mechanisms underlying altered pain processing following sleep deprivation are unknown. Moreover, it remains unclear whether ecologically modest night-to-night changes in sleep, within an individual, confer consequential day-to-day changes in experienced pain. Here, we demonstrate that acute sleep deprivation amplifies pain reactivity within human (male and female) primary somatosensory cortex yet blunts pain reactivity in higher-order valuation and decision-making regions of the striatum and insula cortex. Consistent with this altered neural signature, we further show that sleep deprivation expands the temperature range for classifying a stimulus as painful, specifically through a lowering of pain thresholds. Moreover, the degree of amplified reactivity within somatosensory cortex following sleep deprivation significantly predicts this expansion of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AJ Krause, AA Prather, TD Wager, MA Lindquist… - Journal of Neuroscience, 2019