Hypnosis and Mindfulness for Chronic Pain Management Through the Lens of the Free Energy Principle
Keywords:
Hypnosis, Mindfulness, Chronic Pain, Management, Free EnergyAbstract
Chronic pain is a multifaceted condition that significantly impacts quality of life and poses challenges for effective management. Non-pharmacological interventions, such as hypnosis and mindfulness meditation, have emerged as promising approaches for alleviating pain. This review examines the mechanisms and comparative effectiveness of these therapies through the lens of the free energy principle, a unifying framework in neuroscience that conceptualizes pain as a mismatch between predicted and actual sensory inputs, resulting in increased free energy. Hypnosis operates by leveraging top-down modulation to recalibrate the brain's predictive models, thereby reducing the sensory and affective dimensions of pain through the targeted engagement of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). In contrast, mindfulness fosters bottom-up sensory processing and acceptance, minimizing prediction errors by engaging the anterior insular cortex and orbitofrontal cortex to promote emotional regulation and sensory integration. Comparative studies, including randomized trials in Veterans, demonstrate that both hypnosis and mindfulness provide sustained reductions in pain intensity, interference, and associated psychological symptoms, outperforming education-based controls. Hypnosis shows particular efficacy in altering sensory pain perception, while mindfulness excels in reducing emotional reactivity to pain. By integrating the free energy principle into the neuropsychological model of pain, this review highlights how these therapies recalibrate predictive coding processes to reduce pain perception. Future research should focus on optimizing these interventions and exploring their synergistic potential in clinical settings.
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