Why some people love the burn of hot chili peppers

By Tia Ghose, LiveScience 

Pain isn't always a pain. Sometimes it can actually feel good. 

People experience pleasure during a painful stimulus if the stimulus turns out to be less bad than they were expecting, new research suggests.

"It is not hard to understand that pain can be interpreted as less severe when an individual is aware that it could have been much more painful," said study co-author Siri Leknes, a psychologist at the University of Oslo in Norway, in a statement. "Less expected, however, is the discovery that pain may be experienced as pleasant if something worse has been avoided."

The findings were published in the March issue of the journal Pain.

To see how people perceived pain, Leknes and her colleagues hooked 16 participants up to a device that applied a variable level of painful heat to their arms. At the same time, the researchers measured their brain activity using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans.

In the first setting, participants experienced a series of either a slightly painful stimulus — about as painful as grasping a slightly too hot cup of coffee — or no pain.

In a second setup, the participants experienced a series of either moderate or intense pain. On a screen, the participants could see what type of pain was coming up next in the series.

In the first scenario, the participants rated the moderate pain as unpleasant.

But interestingly, participants rated the moderate pain as actually pleasurable in the second setup, when the alternative was the intense pain. During the moderate stimulus in the second setup, participants' brain activity also showed less activation in the pain region of the brain (the brain stem) and more activation in a region in the middle of the frontal lobes that's associated with pain relief and pleasure than during the same stimulus in the first setup.

"The likely explanation is that the subjects were prepared for the worst and thus felt relieved when they realized the pain was not going to be as bad as they had feared," Leknes said in a statement. "In other words, a sense of relief can be powerful enough to turn such an obviously negative experience as pain into a sensation that is comforting or even enjoyable."

The finding could shed light on why some people experience the burn of hot chili peppers or painful sex as pleasurable.

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Discuss this post

I think this post is interesting because it alludes to the mystery of pain. Pain is difficult to define. We know that pain arises from a nociceptive message, or a message that indicates to neurons in our brain that there is potential tissue damage or harm to the body. However, once that message reaches the thalamus, the signal is somehow transformed into a conscious perception of pain.

An article in the journal Neurological Sciences discusses pain through the lens of the brain-mind debate. In it, Tiengo describes pain as such... "nociception is the danger signal, while pain is the conscious integration of this signal. In this way the phenomenon called 'pain' arises." Pain appears to function both in the physical operations of our brain, and in the elusive workings of our "consciousness." Tiengo seconds the idea presented in this blog post - that "mental events may lower or raise the pain threshold, and thereby affect the integration of the nociceptive signal in the consciousness...they affect perceived pain."

All of this evidence that the mind can control physical perceptions is intriguing. I believe we can intuitively understand that our thoughts can affect how we experience pain. I can distract myself while having my blood drawn, and thus lessen the experience of my pain. When I am afraid or anxious, the experience of pain seems to be more intense. Sometimes, pain can be pleasurable as it is when I stretch. I also see others in pain and can acutely imagine or somehow vicariously experience their pain. I am interested to learn more about this connection between the mind and our subjective experience of pain.

    Reply#1 - Sat Mar 2, 2013 3:20 PM EST
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