“Inferring the infant pain experience: a translational fMRI-based signature study”
This study translates validated adult pain fMRI brain signatures to a nonverbal patient population in which the assessment and management of pain presents a significant clinical challenge. Here we demonstrate that the basic encoding of the sensory discriminative aspects of pain, as represented by the Neurologic Pain Signature (NPS), occurs in both adults and infants, whereas higher-level cognitive modulation of pain, represented by the Stimulus Intensity Independent Pain Signature (SIIPS1) is only present in adults and not observed in infants. This work allows us to use quantitative fMRI observations to make stronger inferences related to pain experience in nonverbal infants.
Abstract
Background In the absence of verbal communication it is challenging to infer an individual’s sensory and emotional experience. In adults, fMRI has been used to develop multivariate brain activity signatures, which reliably capture elements of human pain experience. We translate whole-brain fMRI signatures that encode pain perception in adults to the newborn infant brain, to advance understanding of functional brain development and pain perception in early life.
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