Chronic back pain may reshape how the brain processes more than just signals from the spine.
People living with chronic back pain may experience ordinary sounds as unusually intense, according to new research from the University of Colorado Anschutz.
The study, published in Annals of Neurology, links this increased sound sensitivity to measurable differences in brain activity. The findings suggest that chronic back pain involves changes in the brain that extend beyond the spine. Researchers also report that a targeted therapy may help reduce this heightened response.
“Our findings validate what many patients have been saying for years that everyday sounds genuinely feel harsher and more intense. Their brains are responding differently, in regions that process both the loudness of sound and its emotional impact. This tells us chronic back pain isn’t just about the back. There’s a broader sensory amplification happening in the brain, and that opens the door for treatments that can help turn that volume down,” said the paper’s senior author Yoni Ashar, PhD, assistant professor of internal medicine and co-director of the Pain Science Program at the University of Colorado Anschutz School of Medicine.
Brain Imaging Reveals Sensory Amplification
The research team examined both self-reported experiences and brain activity in 142 adults with chronic back pain and compared them with 51 adults who did not have pain. Every participant underwent MRI scanning.
During the scans, participants completed listening tasks and rated how unpleasant they found various sounds. At the same time, researchers measured activity in brain regions involved in processing sound and emotion.
The contrast between the two groups was striking. On average, people with chronic back pain showed stronger reactions to sound than 84 percent of pain-free participants.
Importantly, the differences did not appear in the brain’s earliest sound processing centers. Instead, they were observed in higher-level regions. Participants with chronic pain showed increased activity in the auditory cortex, which interprets sound, and in the insula, which plays a role in emotional and bodily awareness. They also showed reduced activity in the medial prefrontal cortex, an area that helps regulate emotional responses.










