Background: The lead symptom of small fibre neuropathy (SFN) is neuropathic pain. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have indicated central changes in SFN patients of different etiologies. However, less is known about brain functional connectivity during acute pain processing in idiopathic SFN.
Methods: We conducted fMRI with thermal heat pain application (left volar forearm) in 32 idiopathic SFN patients and 31 healthy controls. We performed functional connectivity analyses with right supplementary motor area (SMA), left insula, and left caudate nucleus (CN) as seed regions, respectively. Since pathogenic gain-of-function variants in voltage gated sodium channels (Nav) have been linked to SFN pathophysiology, explorative connectivity analyses were performed in a homogenous subsample of patients carrying rare heterozygous missense variants.
Results: For right SMA, we found significantly higher connectivity with the right thalamus in SFN patients compared to controls. This connectivity correlated significantly with intraepidermal nerve fibre density, suggesting a link between peripheral and central pain processing. We found significantly reduced connections between right SMA and right middle frontal gyrus in patients with Nav variants. Likewise, connectivity between left CN and right frontal pole was decreased.
Conclusions: Aberrant functional connectivity in SFN is in line with previous research on other chronic pain syndromes. Functional connectivity changes may be linked to SFN, highlighting the need to determine if they result from peripheral changes causing abnormal somatosensory processing. This understanding may be crucial for assessing their impact on painful symptoms and therapy response.
Significance statement: We found increased functional connectivity between SMA and thalamus during painful stimulation in patients with idiopathic SFN. Connectivity correlated significantly with intraepidermal nerve fibre density, suggesting a link between peripheral and central pain processing. Our findings emphasize the importance of investigating functional connectivity changes as a potential feature of SFN.
© 2024 The Author(s). European Journal of Pain published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Pain Federation ‐ EFIC ®.