Pharmakologisches FMRT : Neue Möglichkeiten in der Wirksamkeitsprüfung von Analgetika (Schwerpunkt)

2010 
Pain is a complex subjective phenomenon that so far cannot be objectively quantified by any standardized procedure. This fact renders it also difficult to measure the efficacy of analgesic drugs. In recent years the application of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has significantly increased our current knowledge about the brain physiological correlates of pain in humans. The technique is non-invasive and detects the increased blood flow into neuronally active brain regions based on the so-called BOLD (blood oxygenation level dependent) effect of T2-weighted MRI. This paper gives an overview of the application of pharmacological fMRI (phfMRI) as an approach to evaluate the efficacy of analgesics. In contrast to EEG- and MEG-based methods phfMRI allows more flexibility in the design of experimental paradigms and stimulus protocols to account for the diversity of clinical pain types (inflammatory pain, tactile allodynia etc.) or their dependence upon psychological circumstances (anxiety, depression, stress) in which pain occurs. However, in order to specifically refer results from phfMRI to the neuronal processes underlying pain, future research needs to increase the understanding of the mechanisms underlying the neurovascular coupling reaction represented by the BOLD technique. The same applies for the influence of cerebrovascular diseases on the BOLD response.
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