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Review Case Reports
Central poststroke pain: current diagnosis and treatment.
- Murray Flaster, Edwin Meresh, Murali Rao, and José Biller.
- Department of Neurology, Loyola University Chicago, Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood, IL, USA.
- Top Stroke Rehabil. 2013 Mar 1; 20 (2): 116-23.
AbstractCentral post-stroke pain syndrome (CPSP) is a debilitating sequel that can follow thalamic sensory stroke. Less well recognized, CPSP follows lateral medullary stroke and parietal cortical stroke and may develop anywhere along the spinothalamic or trigemino-thalamic pathways. Patients describe sharp, stabbing, or burning pain and experience hyperpathia and especially allodynia. Although CPSP was first described over 100 years ago, CPSP is too frequently underrecognized. It is treatable disorder. Pharmacological therapy, magnetic stimulation, and invasive electrical stimulation are reviewed and recommendations made.
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