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Neurologic Signatures of Chronic Pain Disorders
"Brain signatures" as objective measures of acute pain have been characterized with functional magnetic resonance image and machine learning technology. As compared to acute pain, chronic pain leads to greater socioeconomic burden. However, measures for chronic pain remain subjective and suboptimal, and the brain signatures for chronic pain are largely unknown. Chronic migraine and fibromyalgia are two prototypes primary chronic pain disorders with high disability and intractability with prevalence of around 2% for both diseases. These two chronic pain disorders have shared clinical presentations (abnormal pain sensitivity, mood and sleep disorders), pathophysiology (central sensitization) and medical treatment (anti-depressants), despite different body parts are involved (head vs. whole body). The present integrated project aims to characterize both common and disease-specific brain signatures of chronic pain by investigating these two chronic pain disorders. Our findings may shed some light on the key mechanisms of pain chronification, and may pave the way for the optimization of diagnosis and prognostication, as well as formulation of personalized medicine in chronic pain, so as to improve life quality of these patients and to reduce socioeconomic loss. The present project includes three interdisciplinary sub-projects (plus one animal study, not listed here): A: Clinical studies for chronic migraine and fibromyalgia: endophenotypes and pain chronification B: Functional neuroimaging of chronic pain: multimodal quantitative analysis of brain connectomes C. Data stream mining technology for multimodal physiological signals of chronic pain: real-time tracking and clinical correlation The specific aims of the present projects include: 1. Identification of common and disease-specific brain signatures for chronic pain (sub-projects A, B, C) 2. Investigation of clinical indicators with predictive values by machine learning analysis of big data (sub-projects A, B, C) 3. Elucidation of the specific anatomical structures or neural networks underpinning pain chronification based on clinical neuroimaging (sub-projects A, B) In this 1st-year pilot study of the 4-year longitudinal study, we will establish experimental platforms for each sub-project, start to recruit participants and perform endophenotyping, as well as have a preliminary integration for sub-projects A, B and C.
Details
| Lead sponsor | Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan |
|---|---|
| Phase | Phase 4 |
| Status | COMPLETED |
| Enrolment | 200 |
| Start date | 2015-12 |
Conditions
- Chronic Pain
- Chronic Migraine
- Fibromyalgia
Interventions
- flunarizine and/or pregabalin
Primary outcomes
- clinical improvement after treatment (1) headache/pain intensity [NRS, numeric rating scale] — 4 months
clinical improvement (headache/pain intensity) after treatment unit: NRS (numeric rating scale, 0-10) analysis: comparing the mean headache/pain intensity in each month after treatment (M1/M2/M3/M4) to that before treatment (M-1) - clinical improvement after treatment (2) headache/pain frequency [attacks per month] — 4 months
clinical improvement (headache/pain frequency) after treatment unit: attacks per month analysis: comparing the mean headache/pain frequency in each month after treatment (M1/M2/M3/M4) to that before treatment (M-1) - clinical improvement after treatment (3) headache/pain duration [hours per day] — 4 months
clinical improvement (headache/pain duration) after treatment unit: hours/day analysis: comparing the mean headache/pain duration (hours/day) in each month after treatment (M1/M2/M3/M4) to that before treatment (M-1)
Countries
Taiwan