1. From acute to long-term alterations in pain processing and modulation after spinal cord injury: mechanisms related to chronification of central neuropathic pain
- Author
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Gabi Zeilig, Nava Blumen, Hila Gruener, Ruth Defrin, Orna Rachamim-Katz, Evgeni Gaidukov, Erez Ringler, and Moshe Bondi
- Subjects
Subacute phase ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Pain processing ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Allodynia ,Neurology ,Conditioned pain modulation ,Hyperalgesia ,Anesthesia ,Neuropathic pain ,Inhibitory control ,medicine ,Humans ,Neuralgia ,Neurology (clinical) ,Pain inhibition ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Spinal cord injury ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,Follow-Up Studies ,Pain Measurement - Abstract
A severe and debilitating consequence of a spinal cord injury (SCI) is central neuropathic pain (CNP). Our aim was to investigate the processes leading to CNP emergence and chronification by analyzing causal relationship over time between spinothalamic function, pain excitability, and pain inhibition after SCI.This longitudinal follow-up study included 53 patients with acute SCI and 20 healthy controls. Spinothalamic, pain excitability, and intra-segmental and extra-segmental pain inhibition indices were repeatedly evaluated at 1.5, 3, and 6 months post-SCI. Between- and within-group analyses were conducted among those patients who eventually developed CNP and those who did not. Healthy controls were evaluated twice for repeatability analysis.Patients who developed CNP, compared with those who did not, exhibited increased thermal thresholds (p
- Published
- 2020