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This study evaluated brain activity in response to painful and nonpainful mechanical
stimuli within an area of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia (SMH) compared to non-sensitized
areas. We performed a meta-analysis summarizing responses to three different types
of stimuli. Furthermore, we summarize reported results of contrast maps comparing
brain responses to mechanical stimuli in SMH that in non-sensitized regions. We investigated
3 categories of brain responses to 1) nonpainful mechanical stimuli in 226 participants
across 16 studies, 2) painful mechanical stimuli in 164 participants across 11 studies,
3) mechanical stimuli in SMH in 84 participants across 7 studies, and 4) contrast
maps of brain responses to mechanical stimuli in SMH versus painful mechanical stimuli
in 107 participants across 7 studies. We used GingerALE 3.0.2 to create meta-analytic
statistical parametric maps. We generated summary Z-maps by subtracting negative maps
from positive maps. Maps were Z-value thresholded at 3.29 and a cluster size of 272
mm3. Nonpainful mechanical stimuli activated bilateral parietal operculum (PO), right
inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) and inferior parietal lobule. Painful mechanical stimuli
activated bilateral PO, bilateral IFG pars opercularis, and deactivation in bilateral
superior occipital gyri. Mechanical stimuli in SMH activated bilateral PO, bilateral
dorsal anterior insula, left postcentral gyrus and supragenual anterior cingulate
cortex. The contrast of mechanical stimuli in SMH versus painful mechanical stimuli
included greater activation in right thalamus, left lateral periaqueductal gray, right
dorsolateral prefrontal (DLPFC), right Rolandic opercular, bilateral primary somatosensory,
anterior midcingulate, and right middle insular cortices. Contrast results revealed
greater activation during SMH compared to painful mechanical stimulation in right
thalamus, right DLPFC, and left lateral periaqueductal gray. These areas are involved
in pain modulation (hyperalgesic and analgesic), while responses in mid insula and
mid cingulate cortices are prominent in processing salient and painful stimuli. Neurosurgery
Pain Research Institute, Postdoctoral Scholarship (TJM).
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© 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc.