Daniel M Sop, PhD, Yue May Zhang, M.S., Wally R Smith, M.D.
Key Findings
- Purpose
To explore the relationship between cerebral blood flow (CBF) and pain sensitivity in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). - Population
Cross-sectional study of 7 adults with SCD (mostly HbSS, with HbSC and Sβ⁰; mean age 32.11 ± 8.16 years) and 3 healthy controls (mean age 30.0 ± 7.0 years). Participants underwent arterial spin-labeling MRI, validated pain questionnaires, and NIH Toolbox fluid cognition testing. - Headline Result
- SCD participants had higher pain sensitivity than controls (PSQ total 5.05 ± 1.63 vs 2.31 ± 0.50, P = .004).
- Mean cerebral blood flow was higher in SCD (72.15 ± 28.90 vs 47.23 ± 12.30 ml/100g/min, P = .0925).
- Within the SCD group, higher CBF trended inversely with PSQ scores (total r = −0.7423, P = .056; minor r = −0.7245, P = .0655; moderate r = −0.7491, P = .0526).
- No significant associations were observed between CBF and other pain scales.
- Why It Matters
Findings suggest cerebral hemodynamics may influence pain processing in SCD, potentially consistent with compensatory hyperemia related to anemia-associated hypoxia.
- Evidence Gaps & Limitations
Very small sample size, cross-sectional design, and exploratory statistical findings limit inference; results are hypothesis-generating rather than confirmatory.
Source: Journal of Sickle Cell Disease — “Preliminary observations on cerebral blood flow and pain sensitivity in adults with SCD”
Regulatory & Guideline Watch
Current SCD guidelines emphasize symptom-based pain management and prevention of vaso-occlusive complications but do not incorporate neuroimaging biomarkers. These findings highlight a research direction rather than a change in clinical practice recommendations.