Ultrasound has potential to alter how the brain responds to pain
New research has suggested transcranial ultrasound stimulation (TUS) may have an analgesic effect
The study aimed to characterise how transcranial ultrasound stimulation interacts with – and potentially also alters – the brain’s processing of pain. Understanding these mechanisms will be very important to support the next steps in understanding whether the stimulation can be effective in helping patients with chronic pain.
Dr Sophie Clarke
Post Doctoral Research Fellow
Having shown the use of ultrasound can yield positive results for people with a variety of neurological conditions, we wanted to explore what it could mean for those living with chronic pain. Most of us know someone experiencing chronic pain, and there are very few treatments that deliver any form of long-term benefit. The findings of this new work are really promising, and we are already building on it to assess whether TUS could be a beneficial and non-invasive therapeutic treatment.
Professor Elsa Fouragnan
Professor
Our study represents an important first step in understanding how this technology can non-invasively stimulate deep brain regions involved in pain processing. We found that targeting a specific brain region involved in pain processing can alter how pain is perceived and change how this area communicates with other parts of the brain’s pain network. The next stage of our research will be to test whether this approach can help people living with chronic pain.