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Annals of neurology · May 1993
Mechanical hyperalgesias in neuropathic pain patients: dynamic and static subtypes.
- J L Ochoa and D Yarnitsky.
- Department of Neurology, Good Samaritan Hospital, Portland, OR.
- Ann. Neurol. 1993 May 1;33(5):465-72.
AbstractTwo behavioral kinds of mechanical hyperalgesia can be clearly discerned by clinical criteria in patients with neuropathic syndromes, i.e., a dynamic type, elicitable by lightly stroking the symptomatic skin, and a static type, elicitable by steadily applying gentle pressure on it. Of 28 patients studied, 19 had dynamic and 18 had static type mechanical hyperalgesia (9 expressed both types). Experimental compression-ischemia nerve block totally abolished the dynamic hyperalgesia in all patients except in 2, in whom it was markedly diminished. Disappearance of dynamic hyperalgesia occurred contemporaneously with block of myelinated A fibers, as expressed by abolition of the sensations of touch and cold, monitored quantitatively. Static hyperalgesia, however, outlasted A-fiber block in 15 of 18 patients; the phenomenon persisted during the stage when only unmyelinated fibers were available for impulse conduction. It is thus concluded that, at the primary afferent level, dynamic hyperalgesia is mediated by myelinated fibers, whereas static hyperalgesia depends on unmyelinated afferents. These two kinds of hyperalgesia represent discrete pathophysiological entities with distinct clinical connotations.
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