Myelinated afferents signal the hyperalgesia associated with nerve injury
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 32 (1) , 89-94
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(88)90027-9
Abstract
Pain to light touching of the skin is a hallmark sign of causalgia. The purpose of this was to determine whether myelinated or unmyelinated afferent fibers signal this hyperalgesia. Sensory testing was performed in 17 patients with long-standing hyperalgesia after nerve injury. The patients underwent a differential ischemic block of nerve function of the involved area. At a time when touch sensation in adjacent normal skin was eliminated, but when sensibility to warming and cooling stimuli was unaffected, the hyperalgesia to mechanical stimuli was abolished in 15 of the subjects. In 2 of tehse 15 patients, a differential local anesthetic, block of the injured nerve was performed proximal to the site of injury. When tempeature sensitibility was absent, but when touch sensation was intact, hyperalgesia was present. In a third study, latency measurements in response to 400 .mu.m stepped displacement stimuli were made in two patients who had hyperalgesia on the foot. The mean latency for detection of pain in the hyperalgesic region was 414 .+-. 18 msec, compared to 458 .+-. 16 msec for the detection of touch to the same stimuli applied to the opposite normal foot. These 3 lines of evidence indicate that myelinated primary afferents, perhaps A.beta. fibers, signal the hyperalgesic pain in causalgia. These fibers may be sensitized A.beta. nociceptors of low-threshold mechanoreceptors.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
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