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Contralateral Sensory and Pain Perception Changes in Patients With Unilateral Neuropathy

  • Elena Enax-Krumova
  • , Nadine Attal
  • , Didier Bouhassira
  • , Rainer Freynhagen
  • , Janne Gierthmühlen
  • , Per Hansson
  • , Bianca M. Kuehler
  • , Christoph Maier
  • , Juliane Sachau
  • , Märta Segerdahl
  • , Thomas Tölle
  • , Rolf Detlef Treede
  • , Lise Ventzel
  • , Ralf Baron
  • , Jan Vollert
  • University of Bochum
  • Service d'orthopedie et de traumatologie Hôpital Ambroise Pare
  • Versailles Saint Quentin University
  • Benedictus Hospital Feldafing
  • Technical University of Munich
  • University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein
  • Oslo University Hospital
  • Karolinska Institutet
  • Chelsea and Westminster NHS Trust and Royal Brompton NHS Hospital
  • Technology and Medicine
  • Max-Planck-lnstitut für Kohlenforschung
  • MS Medical Consulting
  • Heidelberg University
  • Danish Pain Research Center
  • Aarhus University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

ObjectiveTo test whether contralateral sensory abnormalities in the clinically unaffected area of patients with unilateral neuropathic pain are due to the neuropathy or pain mechanisms.MethodsWe analyzed the contralateral clinically unaffected side of patients with unilateral painful or painless neuropathy (peripheral nerve injury [PNI], postherpetic neuropathy [PHN], radiculopathy) by standardized quantitative sensory testing following a validated protocol. Primary outcome was the independent contribution of the following variables on the contralateral sensory function using generalized linear regression models: pain intensity, disease duration, etiology, body area, and sensory patterns in the most painful area.ResultsAmong 424 patients (PNI n = 256, PHN n = 78, radiculopathy n = 90), contralateral sensory abnormalities were frequent in both painful (n = 383) and painless (n = 41) unilateral neuropathy, demonstrating sensory loss for thermal and mechanical nonpainful stimuli and both sensory loss and gain for painful test stimuli. Analysis by etiology revealed contralateral pinprick hyperalgesia in PHN and PNI. Analysis by ipsilateral sensory phenotype demonstrated mirror-image pinprick hyperalgesia in both mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia phenotypes. Pain intensity, etiology, and affected body region predicted changes in only single contralateral somatosensory parameters. Disease duration had no impact on the contralateral sensory function.ConclusionMechanisms of sensory loss seem to spread to the contralateral side in both painful and painless neuropathies. Contralateral spread of pinprick hyperalgesia was restricted to the 2 ipsilateral phenotypes that suggest sensitization; this suggest a contribution of descending net facilitation from supraspinal areas, which was reported in rodent models of neuropathic pain but not yet in human patients.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E389-E402
JournalNeurology
Volume97
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 27 Jul 2021

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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