Back to Search Start Over

Time Course of Attention Interruption After Transient Pain Stimulation

Authors :
Fei Luo
Jifang Li
Wenxiao Gong
Source :
The Journal of Pain. 21:1247-1256
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Although pain has been shown to affect attentional performance, little is known about the time course of attention interruption after pain stimulus perception. The present study examined the time course of the effects of transient heat pain stimulation on 2 components of attention. Three groups of subjects performed attention tasks under pain, warmth, and no-stimulation control conditions, respectively. The pain and warmth groups received brief physical stimulation. Attention tasks were presented 0 ms, 250 ms, 750 ms, or 1500 ms after the end of stimulation. The 2 attention tasks, namely the spatial cue task (Experiment 1, N = 92) and a Stroop task (Experiment 2, N = 86), were conducted separately. In Experiment 1, attentional orientation of the pain and warmth groups was significantly impaired for at least 1.5 seconds after the physical stimulation had ended. Interestingly, this effect lasted longer for the warmth group than for the pain group. In Experiment 2, pain stimulation had no effect on executive attention at any time. We concluded that attentional orientation is selectively disrupted by both pain and warmth stimuli, but recovers earlier from pain. Perspective This article is concerned with the subsequent interruptive effect of pain on attentional orientation and executive attention by using the spatial cue task and the Stroop task, respectively. These measures offer options for investigating the time course of attention interruption after transient pain stimulation.

Details

ISSN :
15265900
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0685abc9683eb87cfeaedd160d3857c1