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- Keri S Taylor, Dimitri J Anastakis, and Karen D Davis.
- Division of Brain, Imaging and Behaviour - Systems Neuroscience, Toronto Western Research Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
- Pain. 2010 Dec 1;151(3):582-91.
AbstractFollowing upper limb peripheral nerve transection and surgical repair (PNIr) patients frequently exhibit sensory and motor deficits, but only some develop chronic neuropathic pain. Thus, the sensorimotor outcome of PNIr may be impacted by individual factors. Therefore, our aims were to determine if patients with chronic neuropathic pain (PNI-P) following PNIr (1) are distinguished from patients without pain (PNI-NP) and healthy controls (HCs) by the psychological factors of pain catastrophizing, neuroticism or extraversion, and (2) exhibit more severe sensorimotor deficits than patients who did not develop chronic pain (PNI-NP). Thirty-one patients with complete median and/or ulnar nerve transection (21 PNI-NP, 10 PNI-P) and 21 HCs completed questionnaires to assess pain characteristics, pain catastrophizing, neuroticism and extraversion and underwent sensorimotor evaluation. Nerve conduction studies revealed incomplete sensorimotor peripheral recovery based on abnormal sensory and motor latency and amplitude measures in transected nerves. The patients also had significant deficits of sensory function (two-point discrimination and vibration, touch, and warmth detection), sensorimotor integration, and fine motor dexterity. Compared to PNI-NP patients, PNI-P patients had higher vibration detection thresholds, performed worse on sensory-motor integration tasks, had greater motor impairment, and showed more impaired nerve conduction. Furthermore, PNI-P patients had reduced cold pain tolerance, elevated pain intensity and unpleasantness during the cold pressor test, and they scored higher on neuroticism and pain-catastrophizing scales. These data demonstrate that chronic neuropathic pain following PNIr is associated with impaired nerve regeneration, profound sensorimotor deficits and a different psychological profile that may be predictive of poor recovery after injury.Copyright © 2010 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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