Abstract

Musculoskeletal diseases with chronic pain are difficult to control because of their association with both central as well as the peripheral nervous system. In burn patients, chronic pain is one of the major complications that cause persistent discomfort. The peripheral mechanisms of chronic pain by burn have been greatly revealed through studies, but the central mechanisms have not been identified. Our study aimed to characterize the cerebral plastic changes secondary to electrical burn (EB) and non-electrical burn (NEB) by measuring cerebral blood volume (CBV). Sixty patients, twenty with electrical burn (EB) and forty with non-electrical burn (NEB), having chronic pain after burn, along with twenty healthy controls, participated in the study. Voxel-wise comparisons of relative CBV maps were made among EB, NEB, and control groups over the entire brain volume. The CBV was measured as an increase and decrease in the pain and motor network including postcentral gyrus, frontal lobe, temporal lobe, and insula in the hemisphere associated with burned limbs in the whole burn group. In the EB group, CBV was decreased in the frontal and temporal lobes in the hemisphere associated with the burned side. In the NEB group, the CBV was measured as an increase or decrease in the pain and motor network in the postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus, and frontal lobe of the hemisphere associated with the burn-affected side. Among EB and NEB groups, the CBV changes were not different. Our findings provide evidence of plastic changes in pain and motor network in patients with chronic pain by burn.

Highlights

  • The purpose of this study was to analyze the changes in cerebral blood volume (CBV) of the cerebral pain network in patients with chronic pain caused by electrical burns (EB) and non-electrical burns (NEB)

  • Exclusion criteria were (i) history of brain disease or injury, (ii) a history of cardiac arrest, (iii) pain resulting from other possible causes as confirmed via medical diagnostic tools, (iv) other forms of persistent pain lasting more than 3 months, (v) amputation, (vi) a score of 8 or higher on the Korean version of the Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS) [17], (vii) psychiatric disorders, (viii) diabetes mellitus, (ix) abnormal renal function, (x) contraindications for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), (xi) or pregnancy

  • The peripheral mechanism of chronic pain associated with burn injury is well known

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Summary

Introduction

Musculoskeletal diseases with chronic pain are difficult to control because of their association with both central as well as the peripheral nervous system. The CBV was measured as an increase and decrease in the pain and motor network including postcentral gyrus, frontal lobe, temporal lobe, and insula in the hemisphere associated with burned limbs in the whole burn group. In the EB group, CBV was decreased in the frontal and temporal lobes in the hemisphere associated with the burned side. In the NEB group, the CBV was measured as an increase or decrease in the pain and motor network in the postcentral gyrus, precentral gyrus, and frontal lobe of the hemisphere associated with the burn-affected side. Chronic pain from musculoskeletal disease involves changes in the peripheral as well as the central nervous system [2,3,4].

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