We have studied 5 patients with unilateral, severe chronic pain due to cancer before and after percutaneous, ventrolateral cervical cordotomy to investigate the central effects of the procedure. The aim was to identify the functional anatomical correlates of abolishing unilateral nociceptive input to the brain. Patients were investigated by positron emission tomography using C15O2 to evaluate cerebral blood flow. Comparisons were made between the patients with unilateral pain before cordotomy and normal volunteers. These demonstrated significantly less blood flow in 3 out of 4 of the individual quadrants of the hemithalamus contralateral to the side of pain (P < 0.01-0.05). These differences were abolished by cordotomy. Comparison of the patients before and after cordotomy showed a significant decrease in blood flow in the dorsal anterior quadrant of the thalamus contralateral to the side of pain (P < 0.05) which was normalised after cordotomy. There were no significant changes in the prefrontal or primary somatosensory cortex. We conclude that chronic pain results in a decrease of synaptic activity at thalamic level either from decreased activity in neurones projecting to that region and/or attenuated local neuronal firing. We have demonstrated no secondary remote effects in cortex, indicating the importance of subcortical mechanisms in central responses to chronic pain.

Chronic pain: a PET study of the central effects of percutaneous high cervical cordotomy / DI PIERO, Vittorio; Jones, Akp; Iannotti, F; Powell, M; Perani, D; Lenzi, Gian Luigi; Frackowiak, Rsj. - In: PAIN. - ISSN 0304-3959. - STAMPA. - 46:(1991), pp. 9-12.

Chronic pain: a PET study of the central effects of percutaneous high cervical cordotomy

DI PIERO, Vittorio;LENZI, Gian Luigi;
1991

Abstract

We have studied 5 patients with unilateral, severe chronic pain due to cancer before and after percutaneous, ventrolateral cervical cordotomy to investigate the central effects of the procedure. The aim was to identify the functional anatomical correlates of abolishing unilateral nociceptive input to the brain. Patients were investigated by positron emission tomography using C15O2 to evaluate cerebral blood flow. Comparisons were made between the patients with unilateral pain before cordotomy and normal volunteers. These demonstrated significantly less blood flow in 3 out of 4 of the individual quadrants of the hemithalamus contralateral to the side of pain (P < 0.01-0.05). These differences were abolished by cordotomy. Comparison of the patients before and after cordotomy showed a significant decrease in blood flow in the dorsal anterior quadrant of the thalamus contralateral to the side of pain (P < 0.05) which was normalised after cordotomy. There were no significant changes in the prefrontal or primary somatosensory cortex. We conclude that chronic pain results in a decrease of synaptic activity at thalamic level either from decreased activity in neurones projecting to that region and/or attenuated local neuronal firing. We have demonstrated no secondary remote effects in cortex, indicating the importance of subcortical mechanisms in central responses to chronic pain.
1991
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Chronic pain: a PET study of the central effects of percutaneous high cervical cordotomy / DI PIERO, Vittorio; Jones, Akp; Iannotti, F; Powell, M; Perani, D; Lenzi, Gian Luigi; Frackowiak, Rsj. - In: PAIN. - ISSN 0304-3959. - STAMPA. - 46:(1991), pp. 9-12.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/115997
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