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Employing pain and mindfulness to understand consciousness: a symbiotic relationship.

Current opinion in psychology
August 1, 2019
Joshua A Grant et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to explore how combining the study of pain and mindfulness could provide insights into the biological and psychological substrates of conscious experience and delineate mindfulness-based pain relief mechanisms.

Results Summary

The study found that mindfulness uniquely modulates conscious experience, particularly in pain perception, and improves the affective dimension of pain, which is crucial for chronic pain treatment. Brain imaging methodologies supported these findings by identifying specific mechanisms involved in mindfulness-based pain relief.

Population

Not specified (general discussion, not a clinical trial)

Effective Dosage

Not available

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (3)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
mindfulness
neutral
particular substrates of conscious experience
-
-
can uniquely control and/or modulate
#1
mindfulness
neutral
mindfulness-based pain relief
-
-
delineates the multiple, unique brain mechanisms supporting
#2
mindfulness
increase
the affective dimension of pain
-
-
uniquely improves
#3
Abstract

Consciousness, defined here as the quality of awareness of self and the corresponding sensory environment, is considered to be one of most enigmatic and contentious areas of scholarly dissection and investigation. The subjective experience of pain is constructed and modulated by a myriad of sensory, cognitive and affective dimensions. Thus, the study of pain can provide many inroads to a concept like consciousness that the traditional sense modalities do not. Mindfulness defined here as non-reactive awareness of the present moment, can uniquely control and/or modulate particular substrates of conscious experience. Thus, in combination with brain imaging methodologies, we propose that the interactions between pain and mindfulness could serve as a more comprehensive platform to disentangle the biological and psychological substrates of conscious experience. The present review provides a brief synopsis on how combining the study of pain and mindfulness can inform the study of consciousness, delineates the multiple, unique brain mechanisms supporting mindfulness-based pain relief, and describes how mindfulness uniquely improves the affective dimension of pain, an important consideration for the treatment of chronic pain.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
BrainConsciousnessHumansMindfulnessPain
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations15
Citations/Year2.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.88
NIH Percentile45.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.23
Normalized Score0.66
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