Original Article

Sensory and Affective Dimensions of Pain and Anxiety Like Behaviors Are Altered in an Animal Model of Pain Empathy

Abstract

Objective: Pain is a unique and subjective experience that has a prominent function in animals’ survival. Observation of pain in others leads to alterations in pain sensation and affection, termed “Empathy for pain”. The present study aimed to evaluate the effect of empathy on sensory and affective dimensions of pain and its effect on anxiety-like behaviors.
Method: In this study, male Wistar rats were used. Two cage mates were selected, one of which underwent administration of a noxious stimuli for 10 days and the other observed the conspecific in pain. Hot plate, tail flick, and conditioned place aversion were used to evaluate sensory and affective dimensions of pain, respectively. Anxiety-like behavior was assayed using elevated plus maze paradigm and time spent in open and close arms and number of entrance into each arm was recorded as the anxiety indicator within a 5-minute framework.
Results: Rats observing the cage mate in pain had a lower threshold to noxious stimuli in comparison to controls. They also had an increased aversion from painful stimuli, demonstrating heightened affective response to pain. Anxiety-like behavior was also enhanced in the observers.
Conclusion: Results of this study demonstrate that both sensory and affective dimensions of pain are altered following observation of pain in a conspecific. Further studies evaluating the underlying mechanisms are encouraged to elucidate the role of different neurotransmitters in this phenomenon.

Aziz-Zadeh L, Sheng T, Liew S-L, Damasio H. Understanding otherness: the neural bases of action comprehension and pain empathy in a congenital amputee. Cerebral Cortex. 2011;22(4):811-9.

Bartal IB-A, Decety J, Mason P. Empathy and pro-social behavior in rats. Science. 2011;334(6061):1427-30.

Book AS, Quinsey VL, Langford D. Psychopathy and the perception of affect and vulnerability. Criminal Justice and Behavior. 2007;34(4):531-44.

Decety J, Michalska KJ, Akitsuki Y. Who caused the pain? An fMRI investigation of empathy and intentionality in children. Neuropsychologia. 2008;46(11):2607-14.

Decety J, Yang C-Y, Cheng Y. Physicians down-regulate their pain empathy response: an event-related brain potential study. Neuroimage. 2010;50(4):1676-82.

Jackson PL, Brunet E, Meltzoff AN, Decety J. Empathy examined through the neural mechanisms involved in imagining how I feel versus how you feel pain. Neuropsychologia. 2006;44(5):752-61.

Singer T, Seymour B, O'doherty J, Kaube H, Dolan RJ, Frith CD. Empathy for pain involves the affective but not sensory components of pain. Science. 2004;303(5661):1157-62.

Danziger N, Faillenot I, Peyron R. Can we share a pain we never felt? Neural correlates of empathy in patients with congenital insensitivity to pain. Neuron. 2009;61(2):203-12.

Breivik H, Collett B, Ventafridda V, Cohen R, Gallacher D. Survey of chronic pain in Europe: prevalence, impact on daily life, and treatment. European journal of pain. 2006;10(4):287-.

Price DD. Psychological and neural mechanisms of the affective dimension of pain. Science. 2000;288(5472):1769-72.

Langford DJ, Crager SE, Shehzad Z, Smith SB, Sotocinal SG, Levenstadt JS, et al. Social modulation of pain as evidence for empathy in mice. Science. 2006;312(5782):1967-70.

Lü Y-F, Yang Y, Li C-L, Wang Y, Li Z, Chen J. The Locus Coeruleus–Norepinephrine System Mediates Empathy for Pain through Selective Up-Regulation of P2X3 Receptor in Dorsal Root Ganglia in Rats. Frontiers in Neural Circuits. 2017;11:66.

Mogil JS. Animal models of pain: progress and challenges. Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 2009;10(4).

Mogil JS. The surprising empathic abilities of rodents. Trends in cognitive sciences. 2012;16(3):143-4.

Nazeri M, Razavinasab M, Abareghi F, Shabani M. Role of nitric oxide in altered nociception and memory following chronic stress. Physiology & behavior. 2014;129:214-20.

Azhdari-Zarmehri H, Mohammad-Zadeh M, Feridoni M, Nazeri M. Termination of nociceptive bahaviour at the end of phase 2 of formalin test is attributable to endogenous inhibitory mechanisms, but not by opioid receptors activation. Basic and clinical neuroscience. 2014;5(1):48.

Nazeri M, Zarei M-R, Pourzare A-R, Ghahreh-Chahi H-R, Abareghi F, Shabani M. Evidence of Altered Trigeminal Nociception in an Animal Model of Fibromyalgia. Pain Medicine. 2017.

Johansen JP, Fields HL, Manning BH. The affective component of pain in rodents: direct evidence for a contribution of the anterior cingulate cortex. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2001;98(14):8077-82.

Singer T, Lamm C. The social neuroscience of empathy. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 2009;1156(1):81-96.

Lu YF, Ren B, Ling BF, Zhang J, Xu C, Li Z. Social interaction with a cagemate in pain increases allogrooming and induces pain hypersensitivity in the observer rats. Neuroscience letters. 2017;662:385-8.

Loggia ML, Mogil JS, Bushnell MC. Empathy hurts: compassion for another increases both sensory and affective components of pain perception. Pain. 2008;136(1):168-76.

Rainville P, Duncan GH, Price DD, Carrier B, Bushnell MC. Pain affect encoded in human anterior cingulate but not somatosensory cortex. Science. 1997;277(5328):968-71.

Calejesan AA, Kim SJ, Zhuo M. Descending facilitatory modulation of a behavioral nociceptive response by stimulation in the adult rat anterior cingulate cortex. European journal of pain. 2000;4(1):83-96.

Keum S, Shin H-S. Rodent models for studying empathy. Neurobiology of learning and memory. 2016;135:22-6.

Mischkowski D, Crocker J, Way BM. From painkiller to empathy killer: acetaminophen (paracetamol) reduces empathy for pain. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. 2016;11(9):1345-53.

Allman JM, Hakeem A, Erwin JM, Nimchinsky E, Hof P. The anterior cingulate cortex. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 2001;935(1):107-17.

Files
IssueVol 14 No 3 (2019) QRcode
SectionOriginal Article(s)
DOI https://doi.org/10.18502/ijps.v14i3.1329
Keywords
Anxiety Conditioned Place Aversion (CPA) Empathy Pain

Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
How to Cite
1.
Nazeri M, Chamani G, Abareghi F, Mohammadi F, Talebizadeh M-H, Zarei M-R, Shabani M. Sensory and Affective Dimensions of Pain and Anxiety Like Behaviors Are Altered in an Animal Model of Pain Empathy. Iran J Psychiatry. 2019;14(3):221-226.