TY - JOUR
T1 - Neural and sociocultural mediators of ethnic differences in pain
AU - Losin, Elizabeth A.Reynolds
AU - Woo, Choong Wan
AU - Medina, Natalia A.
AU - Andrews-Hanna, Jessica R.
AU - Eisenbarth, Hedwig
AU - Wager, Tor D.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant nos. 2R01MH076136 and R01DA035484 to T.D.W. and 5K01DA045735 to E.A.R.L.) and start-up funds from the University of Miami College of Arts and Sciences (to E.A.R.L.). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript. We thank the IBG and J. Hewitt and S. A. Rhea for their help and support in recruiting from the IBG participant pools. We thank E. Delk for her help with data analysis and A. Ledbetter and D. Ryan for their help with recruitment and data collection.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2020/5/1
Y1 - 2020/5/1
N2 - Understanding ethnic differences in pain is important for addressing disparities in pain care. A common belief is that African Americans are hyposensitive to pain compared to Whites, but African Americans show increased pain sensitivity in clinical and laboratory settings. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these differences are unknown. We studied an ethnicity- and gender-balanced sample of African Americans, Hispanics and non-Hispanic Whites using functional magnetic resonance imaging during thermal pain. Higher pain report in African Americans was mediated by discrimination and increased frontostriatal circuit activations associated with pain rating, discrimination, experimenter trust and extranociceptive aspects of pain elsewhere. In contrast, the neurologic pain signature, a neuromarker sensitive and specific to nociceptive pain, mediated painful heat effects on pain report largely similarly in African American and other groups. Findings identify a brain basis for higher pain in African Americans related to interpersonal context and extranociceptive central pain mechanisms and suggest that nociceptive pain processing may be similar across ethnicities.
AB - Understanding ethnic differences in pain is important for addressing disparities in pain care. A common belief is that African Americans are hyposensitive to pain compared to Whites, but African Americans show increased pain sensitivity in clinical and laboratory settings. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these differences are unknown. We studied an ethnicity- and gender-balanced sample of African Americans, Hispanics and non-Hispanic Whites using functional magnetic resonance imaging during thermal pain. Higher pain report in African Americans was mediated by discrimination and increased frontostriatal circuit activations associated with pain rating, discrimination, experimenter trust and extranociceptive aspects of pain elsewhere. In contrast, the neurologic pain signature, a neuromarker sensitive and specific to nociceptive pain, mediated painful heat effects on pain report largely similarly in African American and other groups. Findings identify a brain basis for higher pain in African Americans related to interpersonal context and extranociceptive central pain mechanisms and suggest that nociceptive pain processing may be similar across ethnicities.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41562-020-0819-8
DO - 10.1038/s41562-020-0819-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 32015488
AN - SCOPUS:85079120527
VL - 4
SP - 517
EP - 530
JO - Nature Human Behaviour
JF - Nature Human Behaviour
SN - 2397-3374
IS - 5
ER -