• Pain · May 1998

    Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Gender differences in pain perception and patterns of cerebral activation during noxious heat stimulation in humans.

    • P E Paulson, S Minoshima, T J Morrow, and K L Casey.
    • Neurology Research Laboratories, University of Michigan, VA Medical Center, Ann Arbor 48105, USA.
    • Pain. 1998 May 1; 76 (1-2): 223-9.

    AbstractThe purpose of the present study was to determine whether gender differences exist in the forebrain cerebral activation patterns of the brain during pain perception. Accordingly, positron emission tomography (PET) with intravenous injection of H2(15)O was used to detect increases in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in normal right-handed male and female subjects as they discriminated differences in the intensity of innocuous and noxious heat stimuli applied to the left forearm. Each subject was instructed in magnitude estimation based on a scale for which 0 indicated 'no heat sensation'; 7, 'just barely painful' and 10, 'just barely tolerable'. Thermal stimuli were 40 degrees C or 50 degrees C heat, applied with a thermode as repetitive 5-s contacts to the volar forearm. Both male and female subjects rated the 40 degrees C stimuli as warm but not painful and the 50 degrees C stimuli as painful but females rated the 50 degrees C stimuli as significantly more intense than did the males (P=0.0052). Both genders showed a bilateral activation of premotor cortex in addition to the activation of a number of contralateral structures, including the posterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex and the cerebellar vermis, during heat pain. However, females had significantly greater activation of the contralateral prefrontal cortex when compared to the males by direct image subtraction. Volume of interest comparison (t-statistic) also suggested greater activation of the contralateral insula and thalamus in the females (P < 0.05). These pain-related differences in brain activation may be attributed to gender, perceived pain intensity, or to both factors.

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