Differences in brain structure in patients with distinct sites of chronic pain: A voxel-based morphometric analysis

Neural Regen Res. 2013 Nov 15;8(32):2981-90. doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1673-5374.2013.32.001.

Abstract

A reduction in gray matter volume is common in patients with chronic back pain, and different types of pain are associated with gray matter abnormalities in distinct brain regions. To examine differences in brain morphology in patients with low back pain or neck and upper back pain, we investigated changes in gray matter volume in chronic back pain patients having different sites of pain using voxel-based morphometry. A reduction in cortical gray matter volume was found primarily in the left postcentral gyrus and in the left precuneus and bilateral cuneal cortex of patients with low back pain. In these patients, there was an increase in subcortical gray matter volume in the bilateral putamen and accumbens, right pallidum, right caudate nucleus, and left amygdala. In upper back pain patients, reduced cortical gray matter volume was found in the left precentral and left postcentral cortices. Our findings suggest that regional gray matter volume abnormalities in low back pain patients are more extensive than in upper back pain patients. Subcortical gray matter volume increases are found only in patients with low back pain.

Keywords: atrophy; basal ganglia; brain injury; chronic low back pain; chronic pain; grants-supported paper; gray matter; magnetic resonance imaging; neural regeneration; neuroregeneration; upper back pain; voxel-based morphometry.