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Brain, Vol. 126, No. 3, 669-684, March 2003
© 2003 Guarantors of Brain
doi: 10.1093/brain/awg065

The effect of negative emotional context on neural and behavioural responses to oesophageal stimulation

Mary L. Phillips1, Lloyd J. Gregory2,4, Sarah Cullen1, Steven Cohen2,4, Virginia Ng2, Christopher Andrew2, Vincent Giampietro2, Edward Bullmore3, Fernando Zelaya2, Edson Amaro2, David G. Thompson4, Anthony R. Hobson4, Steven C. R. Williams2, Michael Brammer2 and Qasim Aziz2,4

1 Division of Psychological Medicine, Guy’s, St Thomas’ and King’s College School of Clinical Medicine and Institute of Psychiatry, 2 Neuroimaging Research Group, Institute of Psychiatry, London, 3 Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge and 4 Section of Gastrointestinal Science, University of Manchester, Hope Hospital, Salford, UK

Correspondence to: Dr Lloyd J. Gregory, GI Sciences, Clinical Sciences Building, Hope Hospital, Stott Lane, Salford M6 8HD, UK E-mail: lloyd.gregory{at}man.ac.uk

Sensory experience is influenced by emotional context. Although perception of emotion and unpleasant visceral sensation are associated with activation within the insula and dorsal and ventral anterior cingulate gyri (ACG), regions important for attention to and perception of sensory and emotional information, the neural mechanisms underlying the effect of emotional context upon visceral sensation remain unexplored. Using functional MRI, we examined neural responses to phasic, non-painful oesophageal sensation (OS) in eight healthy subjects (seven male; age range 27–36 years) either during neutral or negative emotional contexts produced, respectively, by presentation of neutral or fearful facial expressions. Activation within right insular and bilateral dorsal ACG was significantly greater (P < 0.01) during OS with fearful than with neutral faces. In a second experiment, we measured anxiety, discomfort and neural responses in eight healthy male subjects (age range 22–41 years) to phasic, non-painful OS during presentation of faces depicting either low, moderate or high intensities of fear. Significantly greater (P < 0.01) discomfort, anxiety and activation predominantly within the left dorsal ACG and bilateral anterior insulae occurred with high-intensity compared with low-intensity expressions. Clusters of voxels were also detected in this region, which exhibited a positive correlation between subjective behaviour and blood oxygenation level-dependent effect (P < 0.05). We report the first evidence for a modulation of neural responses, and perceived discomfort during, non-painful visceral stimulation by the intensity of the negative emotional context in which the stimulation occurs, and suggest a mechanism for the effect of negative context on symptoms in functional pain disorders.


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