Journal of cellular physiology
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Most post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) patients suffer from tactile allodynia (pain evoked by lightly touching the skin) and it is frequently the dominant clinical manifestation. The pathophysiology of tactile allodynia in PHN patients is poorly understood and this is one of the major limits to the development of appropriate therapies. Epidermal nerve fibres (ENFs) are free nerve endings of small-diameter A-delta and C primary afferents, which can easily be assessed by neurodiagnostic skin biopsy (NSB). ⋯ Results showed that epidermal innervation was lower in the allodynic skin than in the contralateral skin, although there was great variability among patients. There was no correlation between severity of allodynia and epidermal innervation of the PHN skin. In conclusion, the present study further indicates peripheral nervous system involvement in PHN but does not support a direct correlation between epidermal innervation changes and tactile allodynia.