Pain perception in a man with total corpus callosum transection
- 1 July 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 38 (1) , 51-56
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(89)90072-9
Abstract
While classical and current theories of pain emphasize the critical role of central neural pathways that represent the contralateral body surface and cross within the spinal cord, the role of neural input representing the ipsilateral body surface is uncertain: In the present experiments with a complete corpus callosum-sectioned patient, both tactile and low intensity noxious stimuli (43-47.degree. C) ipsilateral to the responding cerebral hemisphere were poorly perceived and/or rated low on verbal and visual analogue scales (VAS). Suprisingly, however, high intensity noxious thermal stimuli (49-51.degree. C) were rated on verbal or visual analogue scales as very intense and unpleasant, therby reflecting both sensory-discriminative and motivational-affective dimensions of pain. Thus, the pathways and mechanisms subserving this ipsilateral input have high thresholds for activation, but once activated are sufficient to evoke all of the critical dimensions of the experience of pain.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Speech without conscious awarenessNeurology, 1987
- MRI assessment of human callosal surgery with neuropsychological correlatesNeurology, 1985
- Profiles of right hemisphere language and speech following brain bisectionBrain and Language, 1984
- The validation of visual analogue scales as ratio scale measures for chronic and experimental painPAIN®, 1983
- Spinothalamic tract neurons that project to medial and/or lateral thalamic nuclei: evidence for a physiologically novel population of spinal cord neuronsJournal of Neurophysiology, 1981
- Response of unmyelinated (C) polymodal nociceptors to thermal stimuli applied to monkey's faceJournal of Neurophysiology, 1976
- Diverse sensory functions with an almost totally divided spinal cord. A case of spinal cord transection with preservation of part of one anterolateral quadrantPain, 1976
- Language and speech capacity of the right hemisphereNeuropsychologia, 1971
- Laterality effects in somesthesis following cerebral commissurotomy in manNeuropsychologia, 1963
- RESIDUAL FUNCTION FOLLOWING HEMISPHERECTOMY FOR TUMOUR AND FOR INFANTILE HEMIPLEGIABrain, 1955