Literature DB >> 9711707

Positron emission tomography during motor cortex stimulation for pain control.

L García-Larrea1, R Peyron, P Mertens, M C Grégoire, F Lavenne, F Bonnefoi, F Mauguière, B Laurent, M Sindou.   

Abstract

We studied regional changes in cerebral flood flow (rCBF) in 9 patients undergoing motor cortex stimulation (MCS) for pain control. Significant increase in rCBF was observed in the lateral thalamus ipsilateral to MCS probably reflecting corticothalamic connections from motor/premotor areas. Subsignificant increases were observed in the anterior cingulate, left insula and upper brainstem. Mean rCBF in the anterior cingulate increased during MCS in patients with good analgesic efficacy, while it decreased in those with poor clinical outcome; conversely, thalamic rCBF increased in the two groups, albeit to a greater extent in patients with good clinical results. Our results support a model of MCS action whereby activation of thalamic nuclei directly connected with motor and premotor cortices would entail a cascade of synaptic events in other pain-related structures, including the anterior cingulate and the periaqueductal gray. MCS could influence the affective-emotional component of chronic pain by way of cingulate activation, and lead to descending inhibition of pain impulses by activation of the brainstem. Such effects may be obtained only if thalamic activation reaches a 'threshold' level, below which the analgesic cascade would not be successfully triggered.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9711707     DOI: 10.1159/000099915

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stereotact Funct Neurosurg        ISSN: 1011-6125            Impact factor:   1.875


  26 in total

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