| Literature DB >> 22623073 |
M Falla1, A Biasiotta, G Fabbrini, G Cruccu, A Truini.
Abstract
Parry-Romberg syndrome (PRS) is a rare condition manifesting with progressive hemifacial atrophy. Although reported PRS clinical disturbances include facial pain and recent studies raised the possibility that PRS-related pain is a neuropathic pain condition due to the trigeminal nerve damage, no studies have directly investigated cutaneous innervation and trigeminal pathway function in patients with this rare condition. In a 50-year-old woman presenting with a 10-year history of slowly progressive hemifacial atrophy and facial pain, we investigated large myelinated fibres with masticatory muscle electromyography and trigeminal reflexes, and tested small myelinated and unmyelinated fibres with laser-evoked potentials. We also investigated cutaneous innervation by measuring the intraepidermal nerve fibre (IENF) density after skin biopsy of the supraorbital regions. We found that neurophysiological data and IENF density came within normal ranges, with no differences between normal and affected side. Our study showing that the standard reference techniques for assessing cutaneous innervation and trigeminal pathway function disclosed no abnormalities in this patient with PRS suggest that this rare and disabling condition is not associated with trigeminal system damage. These findings indicate that in this patient PRS-related pain is not a neuropathic pain condition, rather it probably arises from the musculoskeletal abnormalities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22623073 PMCID: PMC3464465 DOI: 10.1007/s10194-012-0459-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Fig. 1Skin biopsy from the normal and affected supraorbital region. Intraepidermal nerve fibres (IENF) immunostained with the panaxonal marker anti-protein gene product 9.5 in a 50-μm skin section. Arrows indicate normal IENF crossing the dermo-epidermal junction. Scale bar 50 μm. The IENF density was 13.1/mm at the normal supraorbital region and 15.1/mm at the affected supraorbital region
Fig. 2Neurophysiological testing after stimulation of the normal and affected side. Blink reflex (a) after supraorbital nerve stimulation and masseter inhibitory reflex (b) after infraorbital nerve stimulation. Three trials superimposed. Calibration 10 ms/200 μV for a, 20 ms/200 μV for b. Aδ- (c) and C-fibres (d) related laser-evoked potentials after supraorbital stimulation. Two averages of ten trials each superimposed. Calibration 200 ms/20 μV. The latency and the amplitude of short (R1 and SP1) and long latency (R2 and SP2) trigeminal reflex responses, and vertex components (N2 and P2) of laser-evoked potentials were within normal ranges, with no side asymmetry