The deafferentation syndrome in genetically blind rats: A model of the painful phantom limb
- 31 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 10 (1) , 67-73
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(81)90046-4
Abstract
The hypothesis which states that the somatic deafferentation syndrome is a visually prompted response to sensorimotor loss was tested. The dorsal roots, C5-T2, were bilaterally cut in a strain of rats known to be genetically blind. These complete dorsal rhizotomies left the forelimbs totally anesthetic, analgesic and paretic. Contact and visual placing reactions were absent, and responses to pinprick or pinch were absent. Self-mutilation limited to the distal digits appeared on the 1st or 2nd postoperative days and then progressed proximally. The forelimbs were symmetrically affected, and no other body parts were mutilated. The spatial precision of this syndrome, in the absence of visual as well as peripheral somatosensory information from the affected limb, indicates that controlled guidance of the behavior arises from an existing central representation of the limb and its relationship with the total body; a phantom limb. The deafferentation syndrome is apparently motivated by disturbing abnormal sensations (pain) of central neural origin.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The deafferentation syndrome in monkeys: Dysesthesias of spinal originPain, 1981
- Self-mutilation after dorsal rhizotomy in rats: Effects of prior pain and pattern of root lesionsExperimental Neurology, 1979
- The production and prevention of experimental anesthesia dolorosaPain, 1979
- Deafferentation hypersensitivity in the rat after dorsal rhizotomy: A possible animal model of chronic painPain, 1979
- The effect of diphenylhydantoin on self-mutilation in rats produced by unilateral multiple dorsal rhizotomyExperimental Neurology, 1977
- Effects of central lesions on disorders produced by multiple dorsal rhizotomy in ratsExperimental Neurology, 1974
- Fetal deafferentation: The ontogenesis of movement in the absence of peripheral sensory feedbackExperimental Neurology, 1973
- INHERITED RETINAL DYSTROPHY IN THE RATThe Journal of cell biology, 1962
- SENSORY FACTORS IN PURPOSIVE MOVEMENTJournal of Neurophysiology, 1954