Psychiatria Danubina, Vol. 35 No. 2, 2023.
Review article
https://doi.org/10.24869/psyd.2023.174
PAIN THRESHOLD PARADOX IN SCHIZOPHRENIA: A NARRATIVE REVIEW BASED ON THE LASTEST NEUROSCIENCE
Takahiko Nagamine
orcid.org/0000-0002-0690-6271
; Sunlight Brain Research Center, Hofu, Yamaguchi, Japan ; Department of Psychosomatic Dentistry, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
Introduction: Pain is one of the basic defense responses of living organisms. Although the threshold for pain perception varies from person to person, there is no doubt that pain reduces a person’s quality of life. Assessing the subjective experience of pain is especially important in the treatment of patients with schizophrenia. In light of recent advances in neuroscience, we discuss pain thresholds in patients with schizophrenia.
Methods: A narrative review of pain thresholds in patients with schizophrenia was conducted. We electronically searched the PubMed and Google Scholar databases for articles in English with “pain,” “schizophrenia,” “neural circuits,” and “neurotransmitters” in the title or abstract, for the period January 2000 through June 2022.
Results: A seemingly contradictory phenomenon has been noted with regard to pain thresholds in patients with schizophrenia. One phenomenon is a high pain threshold for nociceptive stimuli, and the other is a low pain threshold in chronic pain. As a result, a pain threshold paradox has been observed.
Conclusions: Many schizophrenia patients appear to have an excess of dopamine in the mesolimbic system, which stimulates both the descending pain inhibitory pathway and the salience network. As a result, a pain threshold paradox has been observed, in which the threshold for acute nociceptive pain is high and the threshold for chronic pain is low.
Keywords
default mode network; descending pain inhibitory pathway; mesolimbic dopamine; pain threshold paradox; salience network; schizophrenia
Hrčak ID:
306940
URI
Publication date:
17.7.2023.
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