Cortical thickness and pain sensitivity in zen meditators.

Grant JA, Courtemanche J, Duerden EG, Duncan GH, Rainville P.
Source

Département de physiologie, Université de Montréal Centre de recherche en 
science neurologiques, Montréal, QC, [email protected]

Abstract

Zen meditation has been associated with low sensitivity on both the affective 
and the sensory dimensions of pain. Given reports of gray matter differences in 
meditators as well as between chronic pain patients and controls, the present 
study investigated whether differences in brain morphometry are associated with 
the low pain sensitivity observed in Zen practitioners. Structural MRI scans 
were performed and the temperature required to produce moderate pain was 
assessed in 17 meditators and 18 controls. Meditators had significantly lower 
pain sensitivity than controls. Assessed across all subjects, lower pain 
sensitivity was associated with thicker cortex in affective, pain-related brain 
regions including the anterior cingulate cortex, bilateral parahippocampal 
gyrus and anterior insula. Comparing groups, meditators were found to have 
thicker cortex in the dorsal anterior cingulate and bilaterally in secondary 
somatosensory cortex. More years of meditation experience was associated with 
thicker gray matter in the anterior cingulate, and hours of experience 
predicted more gray matter bilaterally in the lower leg area of the primary 
somatosensory cortex as well as the hand area in the right hemisphere. Results 
generally suggest that pain sensitivity is related to cortical thickness in 
pain-related brain regions and that the lower sensitivity observed in 
meditators may be the product of alterations to brain morphometry from 
long-term practice.


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