Dissecting neuropathic from poststroke pain: the white matter within

Poststroke pain (PSP) is a heterogeneous term encompassing both central neuropathic (ie, central poststroke pain [CPSP]) and nonneuropathic poststroke pain (CNNP) syndromes. Central poststroke pain is classically related to damage in the lateral brainstem, posterior thalamus, and parietoinsular area...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pain (Amsterdam) 2022-04, Vol.163 (4), p.765-778
Hauptverfasser: Delboni Lemos, Marcelo, Faillenot, Isabelle, Tavares Lucato, Leandro, Jacobsen Teixeira, Manoel, Mendonça Barbosa, Luciana, Joaquim Lopes Alho, Eduardo, Bastos Conforto, Adriana, Lilian de Lima Rodrigues, Antonia, Galhardoni, Ricardo, Aparecida da Silva, Valquíria, Listik, Clarice, Rosi, Jefferson, Peyron, Roland, Garcia-Larrea, Luis, Ciampi de Andrade, Daniel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Poststroke pain (PSP) is a heterogeneous term encompassing both central neuropathic (ie, central poststroke pain [CPSP]) and nonneuropathic poststroke pain (CNNP) syndromes. Central poststroke pain is classically related to damage in the lateral brainstem, posterior thalamus, and parietoinsular areas, whereas the role of white matter connecting these structures is frequently ignored. In addition, the relationship between stroke topography and CNNP is not completely understood. In this study, we address these issues comparing stroke location in a CPSP group of 35 patients with 2 control groups: 27 patients with CNNP and 27 patients with stroke without pain. Brain MRI images were analyzed by 2 complementary approaches: an exploratory analysis using voxel-wise lesion symptom mapping, to detect significant voxels damaged in CPSP across the whole brain, and a hypothesis-driven, region of interest-based analysis, to replicate previously reported sites involved in CPSP. Odds ratio maps were also calculated to demonstrate the risk for CPSP in each damaged voxel. Our exploratory analysis showed that, besides known thalamic and parietoinsular areas, significant voxels carrying a high risk for CPSP were located in the white matter encompassing thalamoinsular connections (one-tailed threshold Z > 3.96, corrected P value
ISSN:0304-3959
1872-6623
DOI:10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002427