Krause Thomas, Asseyer Susanna, Geisler Frederik, Fiebach Jochen B, Oeltjenbruns Jochen, Kopf Andreas, Villringer Kersten, Villringer Arno, Jungehulsing Gerhard J
Department of Neurology, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany Center for Stroke Research, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany Max Planck Institute, Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany Mind Brain Institute at Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Humboldt Universität, Berlin, Germany Department of Neurology, Jüdisches Krankenhaus Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
Pain. 2016 Jan;157(1):194-202. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000000354.
Approximately 20% of patients suffering from stroke with pure or predominant sensory symptoms (referred to as sensory stroke patients) develop central poststroke pain (CPSP). It is largely unknown what distinguishes these patients from those who remain pain free. Using quantitative sensory testing (QST), we analyzed the somatosensory profiles of 50 patients with chronic sensory stroke, of which 25 suffered from CPSP. As compared with reference data from healthy controls, patients with CPSP showed alterations of thermal and mechanical thresholds on the body area contralateral to their stroke (P < 0.01). Patients with sensory stroke but without CPSP (non-pain sensory stroke [NPSS] patients) exhibited similar albeit less pronounced contralesional changes. Paradoxical heat sensation (PHS) and dynamic mechanical allodynia (DMA) showed higher values in CPSP, and an elevated cold detection threshold (CDT) was seen more often in CPSP than in patients with NPSS (P < 0.05). In patients with CPSP, changes in CDT, PHS, dynamic mechanical allodynia, and temporal pain summation (wind-up ratio) each correlated with the presence of pain (P < 0.05). On the homologous ipsilesional body area, both patient groups showed additional significant abnormalities as compared with the reference data, which strongly resembled the contralesional changes. In summary, our analysis reveals that CPSP is associated with impaired temperature perception and positive sensory signs, but differences between patients with CPSP and NPSS are subtle. Both patients with CPSP and NPSS show considerable QST changes on the ipsilesional body side. These results are in part paralleled by recent findings of bilaterally spread cortical atrophy in CPSP and might reflect chronic maladaptive cortical plasticity, particularly in patients with CPSP.
约20%患有纯感觉症状或主要为感觉症状的中风患者(称为感觉性中风患者)会发生中风后中枢性疼痛(CPSP)。目前尚不清楚这些患者与未发生疼痛的患者之间的区别。我们采用定量感觉测试(QST)分析了50例慢性感觉性中风患者的躯体感觉特征,其中25例患有CPSP。与健康对照的参考数据相比,CPSP患者中风对侧身体部位的热阈值和机械阈值发生改变(P<0.01)。有感觉性中风但无CPSP的患者(非疼痛性感觉性中风[NPSS]患者)表现出类似但程度较轻的对侧变化。矛盾性热感觉(PHS)和动态机械性异常性疼痛(DMA)在CPSP患者中值更高,CPSP患者中冷觉检测阈值(CDT)升高的情况比NPSS患者更常见(P<0.05)。在CPSP患者中,CDT、PHS、动态机械性异常性疼痛和时间性疼痛总和(累加比率)的变化均与疼痛的存在相关(P<0.05)。在同侧相应身体部位,与参考数据相比,两组患者均显示出其他显著异常,这些异常与对侧变化非常相似。总之,我们的分析表明,CPSP与温度感知受损和阳性感觉体征相关,但CPSP患者与NPSS患者之间的差异很细微。CPSP患者和NPSS患者在同侧身体侧均表现出明显的QST变化。这些结果部分与最近关于CPSP双侧皮质萎缩扩散的研究结果相符,可能反映了慢性适应性不良的皮质可塑性,尤其是在CPSP患者中。