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eural Bases of Subjective Control in Pain Processing

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Pain in healthy participants
Registration Number
DRKS00029348
Lead Sponsor
Insitut für Systemische Neurowissenschaften,Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf
Brief Summary

Not available

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
Recruiting
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

MRI-safety criteria

Exclusion Criteria

pregnant or nursing, acute or chronic pain, skin injury on arm, acute or chronic somatic or psychiatric illness (based on self-disclosure or professional examination), regular medication intake (except for allergy or thyroid medication, contraceptive medication, occasional use of pain medication), intake of painkillers in the 24 hours preceding the study appointment, symptoms of respiratory illness, contact with a Covid-19 case in the last 14 days

Study & Design

Study Type
interventional
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
The present study aims to explore how subjective controllability and expectations affect acute pain perception in healthy subjects. It will examine the extent to which brain activity differs between a) controllable and predictable, b) non-controllable and predictable, and c) non-controllable, non-predictable painful thermal heat stimuli in healthy subjects. Each of the subjects completes all three conditions of the experiment (a-c) in the MRI scanner. The parameters that will be measured with respect to the study goal are the functional brain activation data (fMRI, blood-oxygen-level-dependent response) in the whole brain during the application of thermal pain stimuli, in the above conditions. Additionally, subjective pain ratings will be recorded on a visual analog scale. The analysis will primarily focus on differences in functional brain activation in pain, expectation and controllability related brain areas and subjective pain ratings between conditions. <br> <br>
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Exploratory analysis: Computational models to better explain the cognitive mechanisms behind pain ratings of the participants, skin conductance responses, influence of anxiety before experiment, individual differences in controllability sensitivity and locus of control (external vs. internal) as measured with questionnaires. Analysis of fMRI data on single trial basis.
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