08:30 - 10:00
Wed-A7-Talk VI-
Wed-Talk VI-
Room: A7
Chair/s:
Angelika Dierolf
The aging population is disproportionally affected by pain and its consequences. Aging is known to affect neurobiological aspects of pain perception and has been associated with a deterioration of descending pain inhibitory mechanisms. However, little is known about whether cognitive pain modulatory mechanisms are preserved in the older age. Here, we present a series of studies on cognitive and situational factors influencing pain processing and the efficacy of cognitive pain modulation on the behavioral and (neuro)physiological level, focusing on underlying neural mechanisms to gain insight in the changes of the aging brain associated with pain processing and pain modulation.
Ana María González Roldán will start presenting data from several electrophysiological studies examining how aging and chronic pain may mutually contribute to enhanced pain perception. Further expanding on chronic pain, Joukje Oosterman will present a study on the underlying neural mechanism of loss of control over pain in aging, a predictor for future chronic pain. She will focus on age-related changes in function and EEG-connectivity in brain circuits involved in pain processing in relation to top-down cognitive modulation of pain control. Turning to distraction from pain as a top-down inhibitory process, Marian van der Meulen will discuss the relationship between functional connectivity during resting state and the distraction effect size in younger and older healthy adults. The role of executive functions and age-related cognitive decline in distraction from pain is addressed by Angelika Dierolf, presenting results of an EEG study. Finally, Sven Philipsen will discuss the impact of acute stress on the efficacy of distraction from pain in young and older adults.
 The impact of executive functioning and age-related cognitive decline on distraction from pain
Wed-A7-Talk VI-04
Presented by: Angelika Dierolf
Angelika Dierolf 1, Marian van der Meulen 1, Wolfgang Miltner 2
1 Universität Luxemburg; Department of Behavioural and Cognitive Sciences; Institute for Health and Behaviour; Stress, Pain, and Gene-Environment Interplay, 2 Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Klinische Psychologie
Older people, suffering from pain and its consequences more often than younger people, would benefit significantly from non-pharmacological pain treatment. So far, little is known about how age affects psychological pain modulation strategies. Preliminary findings hint towards a less efficient pain inhibition through cognition-based pain modulation strategies, as cognitive distraction from pain. Here, executive functions (EFs) have been considered a key factor in the age – pain relationship, with age-related cognitive decline in EFs being associated with reduced pain relief through distraction in older adults.
We investigated influence of four core EFs on distraction from pain in aging. In a two-session design, healthy young (18-30 years) and older participants (60+ years) performed a Go-Nogo task, the Stroop-Color-Word-Task, the Sternberg-Task, and the Attentional Network Task. Afterwards, participants performed a pain distraction task, namely a n-Back working memory task with low and high cognitive load, during which participants received individually adjusted transdermal electrical pulse trains in non-painful and moderately painful intensities to the inner forearm. Ratings of intensity and unpleasantness were collected and stimulus-related (EF tasks) and pain-related evoked potentials were recorded with a 64-channel EEG. Unexpectedly, first analyses on the currently small sample suggest a more efficient pain relief through distraction under low relative to high cognitive load in older adults. The distraction effect was related to EFs, some of which showed age-related cognitive impairment. Our findings could lead to a better understanding how to adapt pain treatments in this population by including selective cognitive trainings and optimizing distraction task difficulty.
Keywords: aging, pain modulation, distraction from pain, executive functions, age-related cognitive decline, EEG, ERP