• Applied neurophysiology · Jan 1988

    Lesions of spinal and trigeminal dorsal root entry zone for deafferentation pain. Experience of 35 cases.

    • B Ishijima, K Shimoji, H Shimizu, H Takahashi, and I Suzuki.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, Tokyo Metropolitan Neurological Hospital, Japan.
    • Appl Neurophysiol. 1988 Jan 1; 51 (2-5): 175-87.

    AbstractSpinal and trigeminal dorsal root entry zone destruction (DREZ-tomy) was performed on 35 patients with deafferentation pain of various types. Overall, satisfactory pain relief was obtained in 65.5% of spinal DREZ-tomy cases in the follow-up observation. The result in the brachial plexus avulsion group was the best (82.4% improved), followed by the limb pain group without root avulsion (50.0%), but the truncal or visceral pain group showed the worst result (33.3%). Two patients with postherpetic trigeminal neuralgia were completely relieved of pain in the average follow-up period of 32 months, while in 2 patients with postrhizotomy facial pain, pain recurred 4 months after the operation in 1, and, in the other, pain in the medial part of the face remained unchanged. Complications were seen in about 60% of the patients, which were, however, all mild, except for 2 cases of death due to gastrointestinal disease.

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