Subscribe to The Daily Advance RSS Feed Mobile Access E-Newsletter Log In or Register as a New User 
Classifieds
Automotive
Real Estate
Employment
Merchandise
HEALTH
HealthDay | Archives

Depression Heightens Sensitivity to Pain

Depression Heightens Sensitivity to Pain

Related News from HealthDay
Study of Everest Climbers Questions Oxygen Use
Health Tip: Help Manage Back Pain
Family History of Aneurysm Raises Stroke Risk for Smokers
Brains of Bulimia Patients Wired Differently
Childhood Trauma Tied to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Deep Brain Stimulation Helps Those With Advanced Parkinson’s
Health News Archives
   

FRIDAY, Nov. 7 (HealthDay News) -- When anticipating pain, the brains of people with depression kick into overdrive and hinder their ability to handle hurt, a new study shows.

The November issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry reports brain imaging also reveals that during the painful experience, activity then decreases in other areas, including those regions that handle pain modulation.

"The anticipatory brain response may indicate hypervigilance to impending threat, which may lead to increased helplessness and maladaptative modulation during the experience of heat pain," the authors wrote. "This mechanism could in part explain the high comorbidity of pain and depression when these conditions become chronic."

Chronic pain and depression often overlap, the authors wrote. More than 75 percent of depression patients have recurring or chronic pain, while between 30 percent and 60 percent of chronic pain patients also report symptoms of depression.

"Understanding the neurobiological basis of this relationship is important, because the presence of comorbid pain contributes significantly to poorer outcomes and increased cost of treatment in major depressive disorder," they wrote.

The research team, from the University of California, San Diego, in La Jolla, studied 30 adults, half with a major depressive disorder but not on medication for the condition and half without it. All wore devices that could heat their arms to painful levels, and all were given visual signals before the exercise as to whether they would feel painful heat or a more mild warmth.

The patients with depression also completed a questionnaire about their tendencies to magnify, ruminate over or feel helpless in the face of pain.

Compared with the controls, patients with depression showed increased activation in certain areas of their brain, including the right amygdala -- a brain region tied to emotional responses. This increased activity also correlated to higher helplessness scores on the questionnaires of the patients with depression.

"Future studies that directly examine whether maladaptive response to pain in major depressive disorder is due to emotional allodynia [a pain response to a non-painful stimulus], maladaptive control responses, lack of resilience and/or ineffectual recruitment of positive energy resources will further our understanding of pain-depression comorbidity," the authors concluded.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Health has more about depression.

 

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.



HELPFUL TOOLS

Analyze Yourself

Calculate your body mass.
Analyze yourself for depression.
Rate yourself for thyroid disease.
Do you have a sinus infection?




Marshall News Messenger Top Cars
Chrysler Town & Country,3.3L V6 12V MPFI OHV Flexible Fuel...(more) 
Chevrolet Tahoe,8 Cylinder, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD,6.0L V8 16V MPFI OHV, Standard Pickup Truck...(more) 
Dodge Charger,6 Cylinder, Large Car...(more) 
Chevrolet Suburban,8 Cylinder, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Buick Rendezvous,6 Cylinder, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more) 
Pontiac Solstice,2.4L I4 16V 177hp 166 lb-ft torque, Two Seater...(more) 
Chevrolet Malibu Maxx,3.5L V6 12V OHV 201hp 220 lb-ft torque...(more) 
-View All Top Cars-
-Place an Ad-
 

Marshall News | Marshall Weather | Sports | Lifestyle | Business News | Opinions | Classifieds | Sitemap
Marshall Cars | Marshall Real Estate | Marshall Jobs

Copyright 2008 Marshall News Messenger. All rights reserved.

By using this service, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy.
Registered site users, you may edit your profile.