Abstract

We analyzed the conscious sensory responses to cortical stimulation of 31 patients with post-stroke pain who underwent motor cortex stimulation (MCS) therapy. During surgery for electrode placement, a sensory response (tingle projected to a localized peripheral area) was elicited by high-frequency stimulation (50 Hz) in 23 (84%) from the somatosensory cortex, and in 16 (52%) from the motor cortex without muscle contraction. Unpleasant painful sensation was induced or their original pain was exacerbated in 12 patients (39%) when the somatosensory cortex was stimulated and in two (6%) when the motor cortex was stimulated. Somatosensory responses were induced in eight (25%) even by low-frequency stimulation (1–f the motor cortex at an intensity below the threshold for muscle contraction. In contrast, among 20 nonpain patients who underwent a similar procedure for cortical mapping in epilepsy or brain tumor surgery, a sensory response was produced by high-frequency stimulation in only eight (40%; p < 0.02) from the somatosensory cortex and four (20%; p < 0.03) from the motor cortex. Pain sensation was not induced by stimulation of the somatosensory cortex (p < 0.002) or motor cortex in any of these patients. In addition, none of these patients reported a sensory response to low-frequency stimulation. In both of the two post-troke pain patients who reported abnormal pain sensation in response to stimulation of the motor cortex, MCS failed to control their post-stroke pain. These findings imply that the sensitivity of the perceptual system even to activity of the motor cortex is heightened in post-stroke pain patients, which can sometimes hinder pain control by MCS.

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