Loading…

Experimental pain impairs recognition memory irrespective of pain predictability

Background Pain is hardwired to signal threat and tissue damage and therefore automatically attracts attention to initiate withdrawal or defensive behaviour. This well‐known interruptive function of pain interferes with cognitive functioning and is modulated by bottom‐up and top‐down variables. Here...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of pain 2016-07, Vol.20 (6), p.977-988
Main Authors: Forkmann, K., Schmidt, K., Schultz, H., Sommer, T., Bingel, U.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background Pain is hardwired to signal threat and tissue damage and therefore automatically attracts attention to initiate withdrawal or defensive behaviour. This well‐known interruptive function of pain interferes with cognitive functioning and is modulated by bottom‐up and top‐down variables. Here, we applied predictable or unpredictable painful heat stimuli simultaneously to the presentation of neutral images to investigate (I) whether the predictability of pain modulated its effect on the encoding of images (episodic memory) and (II) whether subjects remember that certain images have been previously presented with pain (source memory). Methods Twenty‐four healthy subjects performed a categorization task in which 80 images had to be categorized into living or non‐living objects. We compared the processing and encoding of these images during cued and non‐cued pain trials as well as cued and non‐cued pain‐free trials. Effects on recognition performance and source memory for pain were immediately tested using a surprise recognition task. Results Painful thermal stimulation impaired recognition accuracy (d′, recollection, familiarity). This negative effect of pain was positively correlated with the individual expectation of pain interference and the attentional avoidance of pain‐related words. However, the interruptive effect of pain was not modulated by the predictability of pain. Source memory for painful stimulation was at chance level, indicating that subjects did not explicitly remember that images had been paired with pain. Conclusions Targeting negative expectations and a maladaptive attentional bias for pain‐related material might help reducing frequently reported pain‐induced cognitive impairments.
ISSN:1090-3801
1532-2149
DOI:10.1002/ejp.822