| Literature DB >> 31428032 |
Sung Ho Jang1, Jeong Pyo Seo1, Sung Jun Lee1.
Abstract
Elucidation of the pathophysiological mechanism of central post-stroke pain (CPSP) is essential to the development of effective therapeutic modalities for CPSP. However, the pathophysiological mechanism of CPSP has not yet been clearly elucidated. The recent development of diffusion tensor tractography (DTT), derived from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), has allowed visualization and estimation of the spinothalamic tract (STT), which has been considered the most plausible neural tract responsible for the pathogenesis of CPSP. In this mini-review, six DTT studies in which CPSP due to STT injury in stroke patients was demonstrated are reviewed. The information provided in the reviewed studies suggests that DTT is useful in the elucidation of the pathophysiological mechanism associated with CPSP. We believe that the reviewed studies will facilitate neurorehabilitation of stroke patients with CPSP. However, DTT studies of CPSP are still in the beginning stage because the total number (six studies) of the reviewed studies is very low and half were case reports. Therefore, further studies involving large numbers of subjects are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: central post-stroke pain; diffusion tensor imaging; diffusion tensor tractography; spinothalamic tract; stroke
Year: 2019 PMID: 31428032 PMCID: PMC6688072 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.00787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process (STT, spinothalamic tract; DTI, diffusion tensor imaging; DTT, diffusion tensor tractography).
Diffusion tensor tractography studies of central post-stroke pain caused by the spinothalamic tract injury.
| Seghier et al. ( | 2005 | 1 | 4–5 years | Intracerebral hemorrhage (thalamus and internal capsule) | Configuration (fiber density↓) | Uncertain ROIs, case report, no reliability for DTT |
| Goto et al. ( | 2008 | 17 | 5.1 years (1–8.8 years) | Stroke (supratentorial area) | Higher delineration ratio: rTMS effective | Not pure STT, no reliability for DTT |
| Hong et al. ( | 2010 | 30 | 20 months (5–48 months) | Intracerebral hemorrhage (corona radiata and basal ganglia) | Laterality index of DTT parameters (FA, MD, TV↓) | No reliability for DTT |
| Hong et al. ( | 2012 | 52 | 18.8 months (5–46 months) | Intracerebral hemorrhage (corona radiata, basal ganglia, and thalamus) | Configuration (impaired integrity), DTT parameters (FA, MD, TV↓) | Simple analysis using integrity of STT, no reliability for DTT |
| Jang et al. ( | 2017 | 5 | 11 days (10–13 days) | Cerebral infarct (corona radiata, thalamus, and pre- and post-central gyrus) | DTT parameters (FA↓, MD↑, TV↓) | Case series, no reliability for DTT |
| Jang et al. ( | 2018 | 1 | 2 weeks 14 months | Intracerebral hemorrhage (thalamus) | Configuration (partial tearing and thinning) | Case report, no reliability for DTT |
DTT, diffusion tensor tractography; FA, fractional anisotropy; MD, mean diffusivity; TV, tract volume; rTMS, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; ROIs, regions of interest; STT, spinothalamic tract.
Figure 2T2-weighted MRI and diffusion tensor tractography of patients with CPSP following cerebral infarction. T2-weighted MR images of five patients with cerebral infarction (yellow arrows). Diffusion tensor tractography of five patients at 11 days on average after stroke onset; all the reconstructed spinothalamic tracts in the affected hemisphere originated from the posterolateral medulla and terminated at the primary somatosensory cortex through adjacent part of the infarct (white arrows) and narrowing in three patients (patients 3, 4, and 5) [reprinted with permission from Jang et al. (30)].