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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Functional MRI (fMRI) can detect changes from resting levels of blood flow and oxygenation during task performance (i.e. activation). We used a simple electrical nerve stimulation technique together with fMRI to study pain process in the human cortex. Images of the primary somatosensory (SI) and cingulate cortex (Cg) were obtained from subjects during stimulation at painful and non-painful intensities. Stimuli that evoked non-painful tingling sensations activated the contralateral SI but not Cg. Stimuli that evoked painful sensations activated both the contralateral SI and Cg. These data indicate that fMRI can detect pain-related changes in SI and Cg evoked by electrical stimulation of peripheral nerves. These findings add to the evidence for a role of SI and Cg in human pain processes and provide a simple method of stimulus delivery for its study.
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PMID:fMRI of human somatosensory and cingulate cortex during painful electrical nerve stimulation. 874 80

The authors report the case of a 34-year old woman with no previous cardiovascular disease who was admitted to hospital for acute ischaemia of the right arm due to embolism, preceded by two episodes of pain and tingling of the left arm related to subacute ischaemia. After right embolectomy, with no possibility of controlateral disobliteration an effective anticoagulation, no cardiac source of embolism could be found; However, transoesophageal echography showed a large mobile thrombus in the aortic arch implanted just before the origin of the left subclavian artery. The only explanation for embolism to the right arm was a retro-oesophageal subclavian artery which was confirmed by scanner. Doppler and arteriography. These investigations, however, did not allow visualisation of the aortic thrombus. In view of the risk of recurrent embolism, a thrombectomy was performed without cardiopulmonary bypass, associated with correction of the vascular abnormality with no complications. This case shows that oesophageal echography is a useful investigation in the work up of acute arterial obstruction in young patients with no cardiac disease.
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PMID:[Acute upper limb ischemia in a young adult without cardiac disease. Value of transesophageal echocardiography]. 895 32

We report a 56-year-old man who developed progressive paraparesis. He was apparently well, except for left Bell's palsy which developed on May 9 of 1994, for which he received stellate ganglion block on the left side more than ten times until July 2nd of 1994, when he noted pain in his left shoulder and in his lumbar region. On July 5th, he noted some difficulty in urination. On July 6th, he noted tingling sensation in his four extremities and difficulty in gait. He was admitted to another hospital where he was treated with intravenous infusion of glycerol. After this treatment, his gait and sensory disturbance showed some improvement, however, on July 7th, his shoulder and lumbar pain worsened, and he became unable to stand. His temperature went up to 39 degrees C on the next day. Lumbar CSF on that day contained 119 cells/microliters, 112 mg/dl of protein, and 53 mg/dl of sugar. He was transferred to our hospital on July 14th. His past medical history revealed that he had suffered from frequent bouts of osteomyelitis since the age of 13 years. He was operated on several times on osteomyelitis. He had been treated on his tooth ache until shortly before the onset of the present illness. He also received steroid hormone for his Bell's palsy. On admission, his consciousness varied from alert to stupor. His BP was 150/100 mmHg, HR 98/min and regular, BT 39.4 degrees C. The bulbar conjunctiva appeared somewhat icteric. Otherwise, general physical examination was unremarkable. On neurologic examination, there was no apparent dementia. Higher cerebral functions appeared intact. The optic discs were flat. Pupils were round and isocoric reacting to light and accommodation promptly. Ocular movements were full without nystagmus. Some exophthalmos was noted bilaterally. The sensation of the face and facial muscles were intact. The remaining cranial nerves also appeared intact. Nuchal rigidity was present. He was unable to stand or walk. Muscle strength was markedly diminished in all four limbs; manual muscle testing revealed 1 to 2/5 weakness in both upper and lower extremities bilaterally. Muscle stretch reflexes were decreased or lost in both upper and lower limbs, but the plantar response was extensor on the right. Sensation appeared to be diminished in legs, but detail was not clear because of disturbance of consciousness. Pertinent laboratory findings were as follows: WBC 12,800/microliter, GPT 58 IU/l, total bilirubin 2.65 mg/dl, and CRP 16.8 mg/dl. Cerebrospinal fluid contained 34 cells/microliter (approximately two thirds were neutrophils), RBC 1,110/microliter, 2,949 mg/dl of protein, and 119 mg/dl of glucose; stapylococcus aureus was cultured from the CSF. Myelogram showed a filling defect in the anterior epidural space between the low thoracic and the upper lumbar region. The patient was treated with cephotaxim, aminobenzyl penicillin, and chloramphenicol. On the second hospital day, his BT was still 39 degrees C and he was agitated His weakness was worse than the previous day. Spinal MRI was attempted; as he was agitated 5 mg of diazepam was given intravenously at 4 PM. His respiration was rapid and somewhat shallow. At 6 PM, gadolinium DTPA was injected intravenously; at that time, he was breathing and pupils were 3 mm on both sides. At 6:35 PM, an examiner noted that he stopped breathing; the left pupil was dilated to 5 mm. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was initiated immediately, and intubation was performed. He was placed on a respirator. His blood pressure did not reach 100 mmHg; he was in deep coma. Cardiac arrest occurred at 8:53 AM on the next morning. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC. Most of the participants thought that the patient had either spinal epidural empyema or spinal subdural abscess. The question was what might be the original focus of infection. Three possibilities were considered, i.e., stellate ganglion block, teeth infection, and osteomyelitis...
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PMID:[A 56-year-old man with fever, backache and tetraparesis]. 896 86

A 45-year-old man had typical features of the left medial medullar syndrome which were left tongue paralysis, right hemiparesis, and right disturbance of touch and deep sensation sparing the face. He complained of hyperpathia, numbness and pain of the right body and limb sparing the face. MRI disclosed left upper medial medullary infarction, and cerebral angiography revealed occlusion of the left vertebral artery before the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. In general, the touch and deep sensation are carried through the medial lemniscus located in the medial medulla, therefore central pain is not considered to be induced by the medial medullary lesion. But tingling and numb sensation were sensory symptoms in our patient and the cases previously reported. If spinocervicothalamic tract related to touch and pain sensation has been well developed, it is suspected that central pain is induced by disturbance of the tract.
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PMID:[A case of central pain observed in medical medullary infarction]. 897 32

Twenty-five patients underwent an expansive cervical laminoplasty for nontraumatic cervical spondylosis with myelopathy during the period from June 1990 to November 1994, and all had a minimum of 18 months of follow-up review. The open-door laminoplasty procedure presently reported consisted of the same approach evaluated by Hirabayashi in 1977, except that the authors of this report used three rib allografts to anchor the "open door," rather than spinous process sutures or autologous bone grafts. Posterior foraminotomies and decompression were performed in patients with clinical radiculopathy and radiographic evidence of foraminal stenosis. Preoperatively, gait disturbance was present in all patients. All 25 patients (100%) had long-tract signs on presentation. Nondermatomal upper-extremity symptoms (numbness, tingling, weakness, and pain) were quite common in this group of patients. Bowel, bladder, and/or sexual dysfunction was found in 13 (52%) of 25 patients. Preoperative radiographic studies showed a mean midline anteroposterior diameter spinal canal/vertebral body (SC/VB) ratio of 0.623 and a mean compression ratio (sagittal/lateral diameter ratio x 100%) of 37%. This procedure was quite successful in relieving preoperative symptoms and few complications occurred. Gait disturbance was improved in 21 (84%) of 25 patients and hand numbness and tingling were improved in 13 (87%) of 15 patients. Bowel or bladder function improved in 10 (77%) of 13 patients. Radiculopathy, when present, was alleviated in all four patients after the decompressive procedure. The postoperative SC/VB ratio, as measured by plain lateral radiographs and/or computerized tomography scans, was improved to 0.871, a 38% improvement. In a comparison with the preoperative SC/VB ratio using the two-tailed t-test, alpha was less than 0.001. The compression ratio improved to 63% postoperatively, which yielded an alpha of less than 0.005 according to the two-tailed t-test. Only one postoperative complication, an anterior scalene syndrome, was encountered. Various predictors of surgical outcome based on gait improvement were evaluated. Age greater than 60 years at the time of presentation, duration of symptoms more than 18 months prior to surgery, preoperative bowel or bladder dysfunction, and lower-extremity dysfunction were found to be associated with poorer surgical outcome. Even when these conditions were present, gait improvement was noted in at least 70% of the patients.
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PMID:Modified open-door cervical expansive laminoplasty for spondylotic myelopathy: operative technique, outcome, and predictors for gait improvement. 898 83

Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is characterized by burning pain, numbness and tingling sensation in the thumb, index and middle fingers and the lateral half of the palm and progressive atrophy of the thenar muscles by compression of the median nerve within the carpal tunnel due to a variety of etiologic factors. Surgical intervention usually successfully relieves symptoms of CTS. Recently CTS has been regarded as one of the major clinical manifestations of dialysis-related amyloidosis due to beta 2-microglobulin deposition and recognized with increasing frequency in patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis. We report a case of carpal tunnel syndrome due to dialysis-related amyloidosis in patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis, confirmed by electromyography and biopsy in transverse carpal ligament and median nerve.
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PMID:A case of carpal tunnel syndrome due to dialysis-related amyloidosis in a patient undergoing long-term hemodialysis. 915 43

Pain, numbness, and tingling through the median nerve distribution, known as carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), has been associated with many personal risk factors. Previous studies have implicated obesity as a risk factor for median neuropathy at the carpal tunnel. A case-control design was undertaken to explore the association between obesity and CTS. Six hundred patients presented with symptoms of upper-extremity disorders for independent medical examination related to a disability or compensation claim. The 300 patients with electrodiagnostic evidence of CTS were compared with 300 control subjects from the same initial population. All patients were categorized according to their body mass index. The analysis was stratified for the possible confounding factors of cervical spine abnormalities, Martin-Gruber interconnections, age, and sex. A statistically significant association was found between obesity and median neuropathy. The implications of such a relationship are discussed in light of the contemporary debate over the etiology of cumulative trauma disorders.
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PMID:A case-control study of obesity as a risk factor for carpal tunnel syndrome in a population of 600 patients presenting for independent medical examination. 919 16

The outcome movement in medicine has encouraged the development of patient-answered questionnaires as measures of well-being. A disease-specific questionnaire for carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) was introduced by Levine et al. in 1993. We evaluated this questionnaire in 156 consecutive new patients presenting with pain, numbness, or tingling of the upper extremity. Of these, 114 correctly filled out the carpal tunnel outcome instrument. In addition, these patients completed the self-administered hand diagram developed by Katz and Stirrat for the diagnosis of CTS. The 114 patients were classified according to their hand diagram as classic or probable CTS (n = 47), possible CTS (n = 31), and unlikely CTS (n = 36). The mean symptom severity score in patients classified as classic or probable CTS was significantly higher than the mean score in patients classified as possible or unlikely CTS (p < .01). The mean scores of items regarding sensory symptoms were significantly higher in patients with classic or probable CTS compared to patients with possible or unlikely CTS (p < .0001). The scores were similar for CTS and non-CTS patients on the functional status subscale.
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PMID:Assessment of the carpal tunnel outcome instrument in patients with nerve-compression symptoms. 919 18

As part of an ongoing study of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) in industry, we measured plasma concentrations of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP, a measure of vitamin B6 status) and total ascorbate (ASC, a measure of vitamin C status) in 441 adult volunteers from six industries and a university exercise study. In the entire study group and in non-vitamin users (n = 218), there were no significant differences in mean plasma PLP or ASC concentrations between controls (neither symptoms nor slowing), subjects with symptoms only, subjects with median nerve slowing only, or subjects with CTS (symptoms + slowing). In male non-vitamin users (n = 137), there were significant inverse univariate associations between plasma PLP concentration and the prevalence of pain, the frequency of tingling and nocturnal awakening, and the Phalen test result. In this same subgroup, the ASC/PLP ratio was directly associated with the prevalence of pain and nocturnal awakening, and with the frequency of pain, tingling, and nocturnal awakening. In multivariate analyses, plasma ASC concentration predicted more median nerve slowing and confirmed CTS, and vitamin or vitamin interaction variables were independent predictors of 20 CTS-related outcomes. These multivariate relationships often occurred only after adjustment for age, gender, body mass index, serum alkaline phosphatase activity, or tobacco use. We conclude that there are significant relationships between plasma vitamin levels and both components of CTS (specific symptoms and median nerve slowing). The interaction between plasma PLP and ASC appears to be particularly important with respect to symptoms.
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PMID:Vitamin B6, vitamin C, and carpal tunnel syndrome. A cross-sectional study of 441 adults. 957 20

Chronic facial neuralgias often do not respond sufficiently to standard treatment methods. Alternative modalities are needed for long-term reduction of pain in such cases. The present preliminary report describes two patients with trigeminal and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, respectively, treated with standard methods without obtaining satisfactory pain relief. Electrical stimulation of the motor cortex contralateral to the pain area was employed in both cases and proved able to produce a long-term facial pain reduction. Alleviation of pain occurred after activation of the flat quadripolar electrode placed epidurally on the precentral cortical area and lasted as long as the stimulator was working. By changing the polarity of the electrodes, it was possible to induce tingling sensations and muscle activation not only contralaterally to the stimulated motor cortex, but also in the ipsilateral part of the face. No stimulator-independent pain reduction resulted from long-term use of the stimulation device. During a follow-up period of 18 months, a sufficient and relatively stable analgesic effect of electrostimulation was observed. One major complication of motor cortex stimulation during the follow-up period was a single generalized epileptic seizure in one of the patients.
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PMID:Epidural electrical stimulation of the motor cortex in patients with facial neuralgia. 935 Apr 2


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