Seeing One's Own Painful Hand Positioned in the Contra lateral Space Reduces Subjective Reports of Pain and Modulates Laser Evoked Potentials
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作者:
Valentini, Ella
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Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Hospitalizat & Hlth Care, Sci Inst Res, Santa Lucia Fdn, Rome, ItalyUniv Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Valentini, Ella
[1
,2
]
Koch, Katharina
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机构:
Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Hospitalizat & Hlth Care, Sci Inst Res, Santa Lucia Fdn, Rome, ItalyUniv Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Koch, Katharina
[1
,2
]
Aglioti, Salvatore Maria
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Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Hospitalizat & Hlth Care, Sci Inst Res, Santa Lucia Fdn, Rome, ItalyUniv Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
Aglioti, Salvatore Maria
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Psychol, I-00195 Rome, Italy
[2] Hospitalizat & Hlth Care, Sci Inst Res, Santa Lucia Fdn, Rome, Italy
Studies report that viewing the body or keeping one's arms crossed while receiving painful stimuli may have an analgesic effect. Interestingly, changes in ratings of pain are accompanied by a reduction of brain metabolism or of laser evoked potentials amplitude. What remains unknown is the link between visual analgesia and crossed-arms related analgesia. Here, we investigated pain perception and laser evoked potentials in 3 visual contexts while participants kept their arms in a crossed or uncrossed position during vision of 1) one's own hand, 2) a neutral object in the same spatial location, and 3) a fixation cross placed in front of the participant. We found that having vision of the affected body part in the crossed-arms position was associated with a significant reduction in pain reports. However, no analgesic effect of having vision of the hand in an uncrossed position or of crossing the arms alone was found. The increase of the late vertex laser evoked potential P2 amplitude indexed a general effect of vision of the hand. Our results hint at a complex interaction between cross-modal input and body representation in different spatial frames of reference and at the same time question the effect of visual analgesia and crossed-arms analgesia alone. Perspective: We found that nociceptive stimuli delivered to the hand in a crossed-arms position evoke less pain than in a canonical anatomic position. Yet we report no significant analgesic effect of vision or crossing the arms on their own. These findings foster the integration of visuospatial and proprioceptive information in rehabilitation protocols. (C) 2015 by the American Pain Society