Implications of the failure of nerve resection and graft to cure chronic pain produced by nerve lesions.
Open Access
- 1 December 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry
- Vol. 44 (12) , 1068-1073
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.44.12.1068
Abstract
Seven patients had developed pain and abnormal sensitivity in the area supplied by a single nerve which had been injured. They were treated unsuccessfully for periods ranging from 3 to 108 months by conservative methods including neurolysis, local anaesthesia, sympathetic blocks, guanethidine, transcutaneous stimulation and analgesics. All then had the damaged nerve resected and in five cases a sural nerve graft was inserted to bridge the resected gap. The patients were then examined 20 to 72 months after the operation. In all seven cases pain and abnormal sensitivity of some intensity recurred in the same area and with the same qualitative characteristic as experienced before the operation. This operation should not be done in patients with this condition. Reasons are given to suggest that peripheral nerve damage induces changes in the central nervous system which are not reversed by treatment directed at the area of the original injury.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of peripheral nerve injury on receptive fields of cells in the cat spinal cordJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1981
- The effect of peripheral nerve injury on dorsal root potentials and on transmission of afferent signals into the spinal cordBrain Research, 1981
- Substance pin spinal cord dorsal horn decreases following peripheral nerve injuryBrain Research, 1981
- Autotomy following nerve injury: Genetic factors in the development of chronic painPain, 1980
- Functional changes in cat somatic sensory-motor cortex during short-term reversible epidural blocksBrain Research, 1979
- Ephaptic transmission in chronically damaged peripheral nervesNeurology, 1979
- Biodynamic plasticity in the rolando substanceProgress in Neurobiology, 1978
- SENSORY FUNCTIONS WHICH REMAIN IN MAN AFTER COMPLETE TRANSECTION OF DORSAL COLUMNSBrain, 1977
- The immediate shift of afferent drive of dorsal column nucleus cells following deafferentation: A comparison of acute and chronic deafferentation in gracile nucleus and spinal cordExperimental Neurology, 1976
- Ongoing activity in peripheral nerves: The physiology and pharmacology of impulses originating from a neuroma☆Experimental Neurology, 1974