Neuroscience letters
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Neuroscience letters · Oct 2001
Prefrontal cortical hyperactivity in patients with sympathetically mediated chronic pain.
Chronic pain continues to impose a large burden of suffering, yet its neural correlates remain poorly understood. In sympathetically mediated chronic pain (SMP), peripheral sympathetic blockade temporarily relieves this pain, so that related neural activity can be studied without perturbing sensory inputs. ⋯ Ineffective sympathetic blocks, i.e. blocks that did not diminish the SMP pain, did not change the cortical responses to the painful thermal stimulus; while effective placebo resulted in similar responses to those of effective blocks. These findings provide evidence for abnormal brain responses to pain in patients with chronic SMP, which engages prefrontal/limbic networks more extensively than in acute pain-states.
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Neuroscience letters · Oct 2001
Conduction velocity of the spinothalamic tract in humans as assessed by CO(2) laser stimulation of C-fibers.
We measured the conduction velocity (CV) of C-fibers in the spinothalamic tract (STT) following stimulation with a CO(2) laser using a new method. We delivered non-painful laser pulses to tiny areas of the skin overlying the vertebral spinous processes at different levels from the 7(th) cervical (C7) to the 12(th) thoracic (T12), and recorded cerebral evoked potentials in 11 healthy men. ⋯ The mean CV of C-fibers in the STT was 2.2+/-0.6 m/s, which was significantly lower than the CV of the Adelta-fibers (10.0+/-4.5 m/s). This technique is novel and simple, and should be useful as a diagnostic tool for assessing the level of spinal cord lesions.