• Pain · Jan 2004

    Comparative Study

    Phantom phenomena in mastectomized patients and their relation to chronic and acute pre-mastectomy pain.

    • Yvonne Rothemund, Sabine M Grüsser, Ulrich Liebeskind, Peter M Schlag, and Herta Flor.
    • Department of Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience, Central Institute of Mental Health, J5, 68159 Mannheim, Germany. yvonne.rothemund@vanderbilt.edu
    • Pain. 2004 Jan 1;107(1-2):140-6.

    AbstractChronic and acute pre-mastectomy pain as well as prevalence and characteristics of phantom phenomena following mastectomy were investigated by interview in a sample of 39 women who had undergone unilateral breast amputation. Twenty of 39 participants reported phantom sensations in the breast. Nine of the participants with phantom sensations experienced phantom pain and 11 non-painful phantom sensations. Although some features of phantom breast phenomena appear to be similar to characteristics of phantom phenomena in limb amputees, phantom breast phenomena seem to differ in a variety of ways such as time of onset or localization. This difference may be explained by the absence of kinesthesis and the small representation of the human breast. Seven of the 39 participants experienced chronic and six acute breast pain prior to the amputation. The amount of chronic pre-mastectomy breast pain weighted by the amount of involved tissue was significantly higher among participants with non-painful phantom sensations, compared to women with painful phantoms and those without phantom phenomena.

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