Motor cortex stimulation is a minimally invasive surgical procedure used for pain control. The authors report their results treating two patients with typical Parkinson disease. Unilateral motor cortex stimulation proved to be beneficial bilaterally. Motor cortex stimulation may represent a cost-effective alternative to deep brain stimulation.
Extradural cortical stimulation for neurogenic pain is a recent addition to the field of functional neurosurgery. About 50% of patients with central pain draw benefit in the long run. However, there is an urgent need for prognostic factors in order to cut the costs of the procedure. In this paper we report a statistically significant correlation between the subhypnotic propofol test, transcranial magnetic cortical stimulation (TMS) and the actual short-term outcome of extradural cortical stimulation in 9 patients. The propofol test and TMS appear to predict short-term effects of extradural cortical stimulation.
Recent evidence suggests that central pain, i.e., pain due to central nervous system damage, may be due to a deranged neurotransmission between the sensory thalamus and sensory cortical areas. Central pain can be controlled either by opposing glutamate neurotransmission or potentiating GABAergic transmission. It is speculated that a relative hypofunction of the GABAergic inhibition both at thalamic and cortical levels leads to a sectorial excitatory hypertonus in those same areas. A blend of the two should mark each patient. A pharmacological dissection approach is provided that should optimize the treatment, up to now globally poor, of central pain.
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