1944
DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.7.1-2.33
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Post-Traumatic Pain and the Causalgic Syndrome

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Cited by 168 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…The condition may spread centrally from the stump to involve the phantom limb. Hyperalgesia and allodynia may be referred to the phantom limb upon stimulation of the stump, whether or not the stump is painful or shows signs of trophic or vascular changes (60). The characteristic qualities of superficial burning pain and deep aching pain may be additional evidence of the involvement of the sympathetic nervous system (60).…”
Section: Phantom Limb Painmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The condition may spread centrally from the stump to involve the phantom limb. Hyperalgesia and allodynia may be referred to the phantom limb upon stimulation of the stump, whether or not the stump is painful or shows signs of trophic or vascular changes (60). The characteristic qualities of superficial burning pain and deep aching pain may be additional evidence of the involvement of the sympathetic nervous system (60).…”
Section: Phantom Limb Painmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In all cases, the limb affected was the same lower extremity that was disabled by sciatic pain. 5. A male patient with foot drop, who did not undergo surgery, also developed thrombophlebitis.…”
Section: Clinical Materialsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The resulting peripheral vasoconstriction was supposed to induce tissue hypoxia, as the major nociceptive stimulus. In contrast, Doupe et al [ 4 ] postulated a pathologic generation of synapses between nociceptive afferents and sympathetic efferents. Impressed by therapeutic effi cacy of sympathetic blocks, Evans [ 5 ] created another name in 1946 ("sympathetic refl ex dystrophy"), which was also eventually dropped.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%