Effects of Chronic Pain, Dyspnea, and Physical Activity Promotion on Functional Connectivity of the Brain in COPD

NIH RePORTER · VA · I21 · · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

COPD is the nation's third leading cause of death and affects up to 11% of all VA healthcare patients. Patients with COPD experience significant dyspnea despite optimization of medical therapy. In addition, over half of patients with COPD experience chronic pain--largely musculoskeletal pain. Clinically, in patients who suffer from both chronic pain and dyspnea, it is difficult to distinguish a patient's perception of one symptom modulated by the other. Novel objective diagnostic tools are needed to complement patient self-report and accurately distinguish symptoms in patients who have both chronic pain and dyspnea to optimize clinical management. It is also important to study chronic pain and dyspnea in COPD because they are common barriers to engaging in physical activity (PA) and exercise. The clinical course of COPD is characterized by a downward spiral of dyspnea and chronic pain, physical inactivity, and significant functional limitation. Although chronic pain and dyspnea can be barriers, PA and exercise are powerful, but underused, non-addictive therapies for management of these symptoms in COPD. We developed Every Step Counts (ESC), a technology-mediated intervention based on the Theory of Self-Regulation, to promote PA in COPD. We have demonstrated ESC's safety, feasibility, and efficacy to increase PA and improve health-related quality of life in Veterans with COPD. In two separate studies using questionnaires, ESC has been shown to improve dyspnea in COPD and relieve chronic back pain in Veterans. An important next step is to understand the mechanisms of benefit of PA interventions, like ESC, in the many COPD patients with both chronic musculoskeletal pain and dyspnea to ultimately design better PA interventions and optimize treatment of these symptoms. Currently, the central mechanisms of chronic pain and dyspnea, and how they change in response to PA promotion in COPD are largely unknown. It has been shown that pre-stimulus resting state functional connectivity determines pain perception in healthy humans. Resting state fcMRI evaluates interactions between brain regions before a sensory event or when an explicit task is not being performed. These communications are altered in older adults with chronic musculoskeletal pain. Functional connectivity among regions specifically within the “default mode” network (DMN) (posterior cingulate, inferior parietal lobes, and medial frontal gyrus) have been examined in clinical disease states, as this network is reliably detected and well-characterized. Functional connectivity may be a novel biomarker of chronic pain and dyspnea. Aim 1: Characterize and correlate the relationship between functional connectivity and chronic musculoskeletal pain and dyspnea in 30 persons with COPD (10 with both symptoms, 10 with chronic pain, and 10 with dyspnea). Aim 2: Explore changes in functional connectivity and changes in symptoms in 30 persons with COPD after use of the ESC intervention to increase PA. Our pr...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10007049
Project number
1I21RX003305-01A1
Recipient
VA BOSTON HEALTH CARE SYSTEM
Principal Investigator
Marilyn L. Moy
Activity code
I21
Funding institute
VA
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
Award type
1
Project period
2020-07-01 → 2022-06-30