Review article
Gamma-band oscillations of pain and nociception: A systematic review and meta-analysis of human and rodent studies

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105062Get rights and content

Highlights

  • GBO magnitudes significantly correlated with pain intensity in healthy participants.

  • GBOs induced by phasic pain were high in frequency and more centrally distributed.

  • Tonic/chronic pain-induced GBOs had a low frequency and more frontally distributed.

  • GBO characteristics and functions were phylogenetically conserved across species.

  • A comprehensive description of GBO heterogeneity in pain perception was provided.

Abstract

Pain-induced gamma-band oscillations (GBOs) are one of the most promising biomarkers of the pain experience. Although GBOs reliably encode pain perception across different individuals and species, considerable heterogeneity could be observed in the characteristics and functions of GBOs. However, such heterogeneity of GBOs and its underlying sources have rarely been detailed previously. Here, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to characterize the temporal, frequential, and spatial characteristics of GBOs and summarize the functional significance of distinct GBOs. We found that GBO heterogeneity was mainly related to pain types, with a higher frequency (∼66 Hz) GBOs at the sensorimotor cortex elicited by phasic pain and a lower frequency (∼55 Hz) GBOs at the prefrontal cortex associated with tonic and chronic pains. Positive correlations between GBO magnitudes and pain intensity were observed in healthy participants. Notably, the characteristics and functions of GBOs seemed to be phylogenetically conserved across humans and rodents. Altogether, we provided a comprehensive description of heterogeneous GBOs in pain and nociception, laying the foundation for clinical applications of GBOs.

Keywords

Gamma-band oscillations
Pain
Nociception
Meta-analyses
Biomarker
Cross-species studies
Heterogeneity

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