Relief of cancer pain in man: alcohol-induced neuroadenolysis vs. electrical stimulation of the pituitary gland

Abstract
To explore new methods for the control of intractable pain caused by advanced cancer, the analgesic effect of electrical stimulation of the pituitary gland was investigated in 25 patients. The results were compared with a control study and with the effects of alcohol-induced pituitary neuroadenolysis (NALP) in the same patients. The pain score (0: no pain at all, 4: extreme pain) in the control study was 3.88 .+-. 0.33. After electrical stimulation of the pituitary gland it was 1.24 .+-. 1.61; after NALP it was 1.0 .+-. 1.60. The pain scores after electrical stimulation and NALP were significantly lower (P < 0.01) than those in the control study, but there was no significant difference when the 2 were compared with each other. The duration of pain relief following NALP (59.65 .+-. 68.72 days) was significantly longer compared with that recorded following electrical stimulation (2.97 .+-. 2.58 days). Autopsy examinations of 3 patients who expired from their malignancies revealed that the pain relief was unrelated to the degree of necrosis induced inthe pituitary by alcohol. Naloxone administration did not inhibit the analgesic effect of either NALP or electrical stimulation. The advantages and disadvantages of electrical stimulation, the pain relief mechanism activated by this method and potential clinical applications are also discussed.

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