According to a recent Institute of Medicine study, 100 million people in the U.S. suffer from chronic pain: that's about one out of every three people. But how do researchers study this subjective condition in an objective way?
One of the big problems in medicine is the need to  rely on participants' self-reports of their experiences.  For example,  in studying pain, participants may be asked to rank their level of pain  on a scale -- and as you might guess, the perception of pain can vary  widely between individuals, depending on a person's personal history,  heartiness, age, and other factors.  What's more, studies have found  that there is considerable cultural bias in the diagnosis and treatment of pain, with some patients perceived as fabricating their pain.
But now, researchers say they've come up with an objective way of  measuring people's pain levels: by looking into the brain itself to rate  pain physiologically.
"We rely on patient self-reporting for pain, and  that remains the gold standard," said study author Sean Mackey, M.D., Ph.D.   "That's what I, as a physician, rely on when I take care of a patient  with chronic pain.  But there are a large number of patients,  particularly among the very young and the very old, who can't  communicate their pain levels. 
Wouldn't it be great if we had a  technique that could measure pain physiologically?"  After a conference  in 2009 on the neuroimaging of pain, Mackey and colleagues were  compelled to try to design a "painometer" to measure pain objectively.   And this is just what they did.
   To begin, the team of researchers brought in eight participants and  applied a heat probe to their arms while their brains were being  scanned. 
A computer was able to develop a pain algorithm based on what  the brain's pain signals looked like when participants were, and were  not, experiencing the painful stimulus.
    Then, from this algorithm, the computer was "asked" to determine  whether pain was being experienced in a new set of subjects with or  without the painful stimulus. The computer was right 81 percent of the time --  an impressive number for the painometer version 1.0. The image below  shows brain regions that seem to reflect the pain a person experiences.
It is, however, important to remember that this is  just a first attempt and there will be kinks to work out.  The accuracy  rate (81 percent) would likely need to be higher for it to be useful in a  clinical setting, and particularly in the legal system.  Mackey says  that "a key thing to remember is that this approach objectively measured  thermal pain in a controlled lab setting.  We should take care not to  extrapolate these findings to say we can measure and detect pain in all  circumstances."  More research will certainly help hone the skills of  the painometer, which will have numerous applications, and no doubt  change the lives of many.
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