altered body perception and pain - by tim beames at physio first 2015

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Altered body perception & pain: “What just touched my arm? Hang on, where is my arm?!” Tim Beames Physio First Conference, Nottingham 29 th March 2015

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Page 1: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Altered body perception & pain:

“What just touched my arm? Hang on, where is my arm?!”

Tim BeamesPhysio First Conference,

Nottingham29th March 2015

Page 2: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Aims• Present a view of body perception• See how body perceptual changes can

manifest clinically in pain• Consider appropriate assessment &

treatment techniques

Page 3: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Experiencing your body

• How does your body feel now?

• Are you aware of any part of your body?

• Let’s explore further

Page 4: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

What about the person in pain?

Edwards et al 2014 Pain Med 15: 364-378

• We must understand the lived experience of the person in pain

• Pain is a personal experience

• Pain is linked to the state of one’s body but what does the embodiment of pain consist of?

Page 5: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

First-person experiences of people with CRPS

Lewis & McCabe 2010 Prac Pain Manage, 60-66

• Distortions in shape/size/weight/temperature/pressure

• Hostile feelings• A sense of disowning the body part• Impaired limb position sense• Loss of anatomical parts on mental imagery• A desire to amputate

Page 6: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

A subjective experience Förderreuther et al 2004 Pain 110: 756-761

“This is not my hand”

“This hand feels like the hand of another person”

“This hand feels as though it’s not part of the rest of my body”

Page 7: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

What feeds this experience of bodily perception?

Lotze & Moseley 2007 Curr Rheum Rep 9: 488-496; Longo et al 2012 J Neurosci 32(8): 2601-2607

• Multisensory – internal & external environments

• Feed forward (predict) & feedback systems (monitor)

• Conscious & unconscious perspectives

• Creates ever-changing online representation

Page 8: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Experimentally altering our body perception

• Body perception can shift or be modified e.g. Rubber Hand Illusion

Bekrater-Bodmann et al 2012 Brain Res 1452: 130-139

Page 9: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Physiology changes with altered body perception

Moseley, Gallace & Spence 2011 Neurosci & Biobehav Rev 36(1): 34-46

Page 10: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Space-based processing & limb temperature linked to body perception change in CRPS

Page 11: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Barnsley et al 2013 Curr Biol 21(23): R945-6

Altered immune reaction with a change in body perception!

Page 12: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

What does all this tell us about body perception?

Tsakiris et al 2007 Conscious & Cogn 16: 645-660

• Experiencing our bodies depends on the interpretation of efferent information with afferent information in action contexts

Page 13: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Assessing body perception -Two-point discrimination

Moseley 2008 Pain 140: 239-243

Page 14: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Localisation of touchMaihöfner et al 2006 J Neurol 253: 772-779

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Implicit Motor ImageryBowering et al 2014 Clin J Pain 30:1070-75

Page 17: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Positions expected to be painful are slower in CRPS

Moseley 2004 Neurology 62: 2182-2186

Page 18: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

What does this all mean?

• Pain or the expectation of pain appears to affect our bodily perception – i.e. the way we feel & experience ourselves

• Changes in our body perception may affect us when making sense of the world

Page 19: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Sense making & pain?Iannetti & Mouraux 2010 Exp Brain Res 205: 1-12

‘We have the ability to detect & react to

salient (& possibly threatening) stimuli & thereby trigger swift & appropriate behavioral

responses.’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oh87njiWTmw&feature=player_detailpage

Page 20: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Targeting body perception in rehabilitation

• Tactile discrimination training• Implicit & explicit motor imagery• Mirror visual feedback• Intelligent/mindful movement• Education

Page 21: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Tactile discrimination not just stimulation required

Moseley et al 2008 Pain 137: 600-608; Lotze & Moseley 2007 Curr Rheum Report 9:488-496

Page 22: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Cork/pen• “I’ve tried comparing right/left thigh with

lower leg & the sensations are the same. I have started tracing one letter onto right & left foot. This does not feel the same, I can still feel the letter on my left foot for 5 minutes after I’ve done it. This is cope able & a nice challenge. I am quite sure this will even out like it did with my lower leg.”

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Training effects in left/right discrimination tasks

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Results for different types of neuropathic pain

Moseley 2006 Neurology 67:2129-2134

Page 35: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

Systematic review

Page 36: Altered body perception and pain - by Tim Beames at Physio First 2015

What happens with training?• Improving body perception may help to

reduce pain– Changing the saliency of a given stimulus to

the affected body part

• However, reducing pain may also help improve body perception!