Autonomic and Thermal Sensory Symptoms and Dysfunction After Stroke
- 1 August 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 26 (8) , 1379-1385
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.26.8.1379
Abstract
Background and Purpose Symptoms interpreted as unilateral disturbances of autonomic function, such as coldness, dryness, sweating, and trophic changes, are well known but incompletely understood clinical problems after stroke. The present study provides data related to the incidence and mechanisms behind such symptoms. Methods Temperature perception thresholds, skin temperatures, evaporation rates, and skin blood flow responses were measured bilaterally in 37 stroke patients aged 58±13 years (mean±SD) and in a control group of 15 patients aged 64±15 years with a single transient ischemic attack. Results Of the 37 stroke patients, 43% reported a sensation of coldness in the contralesional side of the body. Basal skin blood flow and temperature were relatively lower in the contralesional side. There was an excess of evaporation in the contralesional side after brain stem lesions and in the ipsilesional side after hemispheric lesions. Vasomotor reflex asymmetries occurred in 34% of the patients and were due to weak vasodilator or vasoconstrictor reflexes in the ipsilesional side. These abnormalities correlated significantly to sensations of unilateral coldness, hypalgesia, and thermohypesthesia in the contralesional side and anatomically to lesions in spino-thalamo-cortical pathways. Conclusions Focal central nervous system lesions due to stroke may result in symptoms and measurable evidence of unilateral disturbance of skin sympathetic function. Vasomotor asymmetries are probably due to lesions of vasomotor pathways descending uncrossed. Subjective coldness may be due to disturbed central processing.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Asymmetric sweating in strokeNeurology, 1993
- Central post-stroke pain — a study of the mechanisms through analyses of the sensory abnormalitiesPain, 1989
- Unilateral hyperhidrosis after cerebral infarctionNeurology, 1988
- Diencephalic mechanisms of pain sensationBrain Research Reviews, 1985
- Method for quantitative estimation of thermal thresholds in patients.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1976
- Zum Verlauf der absteigenden zentralen SympathicusbahnArchiv Fur Psychiatrie Und Nervenkrankheiten, 1972
- Sympathetic Deficits Following ThalamotomyArchives of Neurology, 1968
- Relationship Between Skin Temperature and the Insensible Perspiration of the Human Skin**From the Unilever Research Laboratory, Vlaardingen, The Netherlands.Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1966
- VASOMOTOR DISTURBANCES RESULTING FROM CORTICAL LESIONSArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1935
- VASOMOTOR CHANGES ASSOCIATED WITH PARALYSIS OF CEREBRAL ORIGINArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1935