Study: Brain Scans May Produce Objective Pain Measures

A new study takes a first step toward creating an objective measure for pain by taking MRI scans of the brain and using a computer algorithm to look for patterns, according to a PLoS ONE report.

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Sean Mackey, MD, and other pain researchers at Stanford School of Medicine in California hope to use the tool to find brain signatures representing different levels and types of pain.

 

In the study, researchers imaged brain activity of eight people whose skin was periodically exposed to painful heat. A support vector machine, using an algorithm capable of learning and adapting, then analyzed the data for common patterns among the subjects.

 

Related Articles on Chronic Pain:

Chronic Pain Treatments Should Be Evidence-Based

UC San Diego Center Trains Patients’ Brains to Reduce Chronic Pain

Findings on Chronic Pain Gene May Lead to New Drugs


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