Articles: pain.
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These studies have examined threshold, frequency, and refractory period characteristics of a neural population in the anterolateral quandrant (ALQ) of the spinal cord of man, stimulation of which produces pain. Subjects were 18 conscious humans undergoing percutaneous anterolateral cordotomy for relief of intractable pain. Pain could be produced by ALQ stimulation in all subjects. ⋯ In 2 of 3 subjects, increases in stimulation frequency up to 500/sec did not produce pain when stimulation intensity was below threshold at 50/sec. The neuronal refractory period for pain in these subjects ranged between 1.0 and 2.0 msec, but the majority of relative refractory periods fell between 1.0 and 1.5 msec. The threshold, frequency, and refractory period data obtained in this study are similar to those found for wide dynamic range cells in the ventral half of the dorsal horn in the monkey and suggest that activation of these cells is a sufficient condition to produce pain in man.
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Good to excellent relief of phantom pain is reported in 5 of 6 patients by the use of dorsal column stimulation. Follow-up periods are 7 to 25 months. One failure occurred despite excellent pain relief; this patient could not tolerate application of the DCS apparatus to his chest wall. The authors review the physiology involved and some less successful series reported by others.
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While pain can be a most useful symptom, it becomes a problem requiring attention when it causes or increases the patient's anxiety, prevents sleep, or starts the patient on a vicious cycle of increasing doses of narcotics with concomitant depression, anorexia, and lethargy. Various surgical modalities and their indications are discussed.