Frontiers in Pain Research (Sep 2024)

Enhancing chronic low back pain management: an initial neuroimaging study of a mobile interoceptive attention training

  • Irina A. Strigo,
  • Irina A. Strigo,
  • Irina A. Strigo,
  • Sergio Garcia Guerra,
  • Salvatore Torrisi,
  • Salvatore Torrisi,
  • Emily Murphy,
  • Tiffany Toor,
  • Veronica Goldman,
  • Benedict J. Alter,
  • An Thanh Vu,
  • An Thanh Vu,
  • Rich Hecht,
  • Jeff Lotz,
  • Alan N. Simmons,
  • Alan N. Simmons,
  • Wolf E. Mehling,
  • Wolf E. Mehling

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpain.2024.1408027
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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IntroductionChronic low back pain (cLBP) poses significant challenges, often addressed through avoidance or distraction. Emerging evidence suggests that mind-body interventions, like our novel Mind Your Pain (MyP) smartphone mobile application, may offer relief. We conducted a single-arm, mixed-methods neuroimaging study to assess the degree to which treatment response to our 8-week intervention, as measured by the reduction in the Pain, Enjoyment of Life and General Activity Scale (PEG), was associated with enhanced pain-related insula activation over time.MethodsTwenty-nine individuals with cLBP completed patient-reported assessments, qualitative sensory testing (QST) measures, and neuroimaging pre- and post-MyP. Functional MRI data during experimental heat pain on the left forearm were collected and analyzed, comparing responders (≥50% reduction in PEG scores) and non-responders.ResultsMyP led to significant decreases in PEG scores overall. Furthermore, MyP responders exhibited increased pain-related activation in key brain regions, including the contralateral posterior insula, bilateral ventral anterior insula, ventral anterior cingulate, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and nucleus accumbens. Although baseline behavioral and sensory measures did not differ between the two responder groups, baseline neural differences related to the impact of the endogenous back pain were observed.DiscussionMyP appears to modify pain response and underlying neural circuitry, suggesting neural changes in interoception may serve as biomarkers for mind-body interventions in cLBP. This study highlights the potential of MyP as a novel approach for cLBP management, warranting further investigation.

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