Reversible Central Pain
- 1 November 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 5 (5) , 528-532
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1961.00450170066008
Abstract
"Central pain" has been defined as spontaneous pain with painful over-reaction to external stimuli resulting from lesions confined to the central nervous system.12 As Walker15 pointed out, central pain can originate from any level of the nervous system—peripheral, spinal, bulbar, or cortical. The pain discussed in this report is of the type commonly known as the "thalamic syndrome," since in the majority of such cases with proved origin the lesions were in the thalamus. It is well to keep in mind the excellent summation of Noordenbos10: "The pain which accompanies such a lesion of the nervous system itself, this central pain, is not due to the lesion. The lesion has only created conditions whereby this mechanism can take place. The pain arises as the result of nervous impulses generated elsewhere." Thalamic Syndrome The thalamic syndrome was described by Dejerine and Roussy4 in 1906, and further elaboratedKeywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- OBSERVATIONS ON PARTIAL REMOVAL OF THE POST-CENTRAL GYRUS FOR PAINJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1952
- EXPERIENCES WITH CORTICAL EXCISIONS FOR THE RELIEF OF INTRACTABLE PAIN IN THE EXTREMITIES1946