Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) increase vulnerability to chronic pain and mood disorders, yet the neural mechanisms linking early adversity to pain persistence remain poorly understood. We investigated whether ACEs are associated with altered effective connectivity within the salience network, a system critical for integrating emotionally and physiologically salient information and strongly implicated in chronic pain. Using neuroimaging data from a well-characterised, longitudinal cohort, participants performed an emotion-processing task (fearful vs. neutral faces) during fMRI. Region-of-interest analyses and dynamic causal modelling (DCM) were applied to examine directional connectivity among the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), insula, and thalamus in relation to self-reported ACEs and chronic pain. Chronic pain and childhood emotional neglect were associated with reduced ACC-to-insula connectivity, suggesting impaired top-down regulation of interoceptive and affective signals. In contrast, individuals with chronic pain and a history of emotional neglect or abuse showed increased thalamus-to-insula and thalamus-to-ACC connectivity, consistent with heightened salience of sensory and emotional inputs. These findings demonstrate that ACEs influence salience network dynamics, establishing a mechanistic link between early adversity and chronic pain. They suggest that ACEs modify brain network activity, potentially contributing to the persistence of chronic pain and emphasising the roles of the ACC, insula, and thalamus.
Antoniou et al. (Wed,) studied this question.