New research out of Northwestern University suggests that chronic pain can rewire your brain so a person actually becomes “addicted” to chronic pain.
The new research published in Nature Neuroscience examined how brain neurons in rats were affected by negative emotions and pain. When looking at the rodents, researchers noted that some rats experienced a hyper-excitable collection of neurons after an injury or pain. These neurons not only controlled some negative emotions, but their hyper-expression was also associated with a drop in the neurotransmitter dopamine, which plays a large role in our reward motivation. In essence, the brain was misconstruing why these neurons were firing, and it slowly became addicted to their hyper-expression. In essence, your body becomes addicted to pain.
“The study shows you can think of chronic pain as the brain getting addicted to pain. The brain circuit that has to do with addiction has gotten involved in the pain process itself,” explained corresponding author A. Vania Apkarian, PhD, adding that pain is both sensory and emotionally based.
New Understanding, New Solution?
With their new understanding of how some people’s body’s perceive pain, Dr. Apkarian began working on new ways to treat chronic pain. Using a combination of two different drugs, they were essentially able to rewire the brain so it stopped seeing pain as a rewarding behavior.
“It was surprising to us that chronic pain actually rewires the part of the brain controlling whether you feel happy or sad. By understanding what was causing these changes, we were able to design a corrective therapy that worked remarkably well in the models,” said the study’s lead author Dr. D. James Surmeier. “The question now is whether it will work in humans.”
The team hopes to take their study to the next stage and see if it produces a similar positive affect in humans whose brain’s have been affected by chronic pain.