Opening

braintherapyChronic pain conditions like fibromyalgia, migraines, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) present with complex symptoms, often involving both physical sensations and intense emotional suffering. Recent neuroscience advances, particularly a July 2025 study from the Salk Institute, have identified a key brain circuit that gives pain its emotional tone, transforming our understanding of pain and paving the way for innovative management techniques. Evidence-based brain training aims to reshape neural pathways, empowering people to reduce and manage pain—even when traditional drugs fall short.

Key New Findings: The Affective Pain Circuit

A pivotal study published in July 2025 reveals that:

  • A specific group of neurons in the thalamus, identified by their expression of CGRP (calcitonin gene-related peptide), forms a direct link between the sensory detection of pain and its emotional impact.
  • This CGRP spinothalamic pathway relays pain signals from the spinal cord to a region of the thalamus connected to the amygdala, the brain’s emotion center.
  • Silencing these neurons in mice eliminates the emotional suffering associated with pain—mice perceive the pain, but do not experience distress or learn to avoid it.
  • Overactivation of this pathway may be a cause of chronic pain disorders (like fibromyalgia and migraine) and affective disorders (like PTSD), making the brain overreact to normal sensory inputs.

This has further insights and implications for Brain Training and Therapy practices, continuing to reduce the need for either pharmaceuticals or self-medication with non-pharmaceutical grade substances.

  • Pain is not just about detection—it’s about how much the brain decides that pain matters emotionally.
  • These findings confirm that targeting the affective (emotional) aspect of pain, not just the physical sensation, is crucial.
  • Treatments that modulate this CGRP-affective circuit may offer new hope for conditions where pain’s emotional burden is a primary driver of disability.

Types of Evidence-Based Brain Training Interventions

1. Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT)

  • Teaches the brain to “unlearn” chronic pain by reframing pain as non-threatening and teaching safety.
  • Could help quiet overactive affective circuits by changing the emotional meaning of pain.

2. Neurofeedback and Brainwave Training

  • Uses real-time EEG feedback to help regulate brain rhythms associated with pain and emotional distress.
  • May reduce the overactivity seen in the thalamus-amygdala circuit.

3. Sensory Relearning

  • Retrains the brain’s response to sensory input, helping distinguish safe from threatening sensations and minimizing overreaction.

4. Cognitive Flexibility Training

  • Engages tasks that enhance cognitive control, potentially reducing learned pain-related distress and disrupt habitual threat responses.

5. Pain Neuroscience Education (PNE)

  • Helps patients understand the difference between pain sensation and pain suffering, reducing fear and emotional threat estimation. Now with new neuroscience backing regarding distinct brain circuits.

6. Emotional Regulation and Mind-Body Therapies

The July 2025 research underlines the value of approaches that reduce affective pain:

  • Mindfulness, cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), and emotion regulation techniques may help downregulate CGRP pathway activity by promoting detachment from pain’s emotional tone.
  • Newer therapies (e.g., emotion-focused groups) could target the “alarm” element of pain directly. (Complete Report: WRD News Special Report)

Need Counselling

Do you, or someone you know have already taken up drugs and alcohol and you’re concerned?

The following agencies/groups can be a real help.

Teen Challenge

Phone: (03) 5852 3777

Fresh Start

Recovery Programme
Helping Families With Addiction

Therapeutic Communities

for AOD dependencies

Therapeutic Community

Addiction, there is a way out!

NSW Therapeutic Community

Rescue – Restore – Rebuild

Alcoholics Anonymous

Clean Slate Clinic

SHARC-Oxford Houses

Sherwood Cliffs Rehab

Phone (02) 6649 2139

Remar Rehabilitation

Phone: (03) 5659-6307
Mobile: 0419 436 687

Transformations

Phone: (07) 55 923 677

Seahaven Private – Rehabilitation

Phone: (03) 8738 4252 

Life International Counselling and Coaching

email: info @ lifeinternational.com.au

Womens Domestic Violence Crisis Centre

Phone: 24 Hours - 1800 015 188

Positive Lifestyle Counselling Services Dandenong

The Cyrene Centre

Suite 5, 49-54 Douglas Street, Noble Park 3174
Phone: (03) 9574 6355

Centacare

7 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy 3065
Phone: (03)94956144

Living Springs Counselling Centre

Berwick Church of Christ

446 Centre Road, Berwick, Victoria, 3806
Phone: (03) 9702 1011

Pastor Larry Edwards Counselling

Dandenong Church of Christ

139 David Street, Dandenong, Victoria, 3175
Mobile: 0410 613 056

Total Wellbeing Centre

Suite 1 / 857 Doncaster Rd,
Doncaster East, Victoria, 3109
Phone: (03) 9855 9555

Woman's Domestic Violence Crisis

Phone:1800 015 188

Eagles Wings Rehabilitation Centre

Phone: (03) 5726 5060

DasWest Drug & Alcohol Services

Details Pending

Odyssey House Victoria

Addiction Center

Alcohol Rehab

- Treating Alcoholism -

Narcotics Anonymous Australia

Addiction Resources for North America

Recovery Connections

recoveryconnections.org.uk - We exist to inspire, motivate, empower and support all those affected by substance misuse, to sustain long term recovery and lasting positive change.