PAIN
Volume 139, Issue 1 , Pages 73-81, 30 September 2008

Numbness in clinical and experimental pain – A cross-sectional study exploring the mechanisms of reduced tactile function

  • Christian Geber

      Affiliations

    • Neurologische Universitätsklinik Mainz, Germany
    • Institut für Physiologie und Pathophysiologie, Mainz, Germany
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Klinik und Poliklinik für Neurologie, Johannes-Gutenberg Universität, Langenbeckstrasse 1, 55131 Mainz, Germany. Tel.: +49 6131 17 4588; fax: +49 6131 17 3271.
  • ,
  • Walter Magerl

      Affiliations

    • Institut für Physiologie und Pathophysiologie, Mainz, Germany
    • Lehrstuhl für Neurophysiologie, CBTM, Medizinische Fakultät Mannheim der Universität Heidelberg, Germany
  • ,
  • Ricarda Fondel

      Affiliations

    • Klinik für Anästhesiologie der Universität Mainz, Germany
  • ,
  • Marcel Fechir

      Affiliations

    • Neurologische Universitätsklinik Mainz, Germany
  • ,
  • Roman Rolke

      Affiliations

    • Neurologische Universitätsklinik Mainz, Germany
  • ,
  • Thomas Vogt

      Affiliations

    • Neurologische Universitätsklinik Mainz, Germany
  • ,
  • Rolf-Detlef Treede

      Affiliations

    • Lehrstuhl für Neurophysiologie, CBTM, Medizinische Fakultät Mannheim der Universität Heidelberg, Germany
  • ,
  • Frank Birklein

      Affiliations

    • Neurologische Universitätsklinik Mainz, Germany

Received 11 January 2008; received in revised form 2 March 2008; accepted 5 March 2008. published online 18 April 2008.

Abstract 

Pain patients often report distinct numbness of the painful skin although no structural peripheral or central nerve lesion is obvious. In this cross-sectional study we assessed the reduction of tactile function and studied underlying mechanisms in patients with chronic pain and in healthy participants exposed to phasic and tonic experimental nociceptive stimulation. Mechanical detection (MDT) and pain thresholds (MPT) were assessed in the painful area and the non-painful contralateral side in 10 patients with unilateral musculoskeletal pain. Additionally, 10 healthy participants were exposed to nociceptive stimulation applied to the volar forearms (capsaicin; electrical stimulation, twice each). Areas of tactile hypaesthesia and mechanical hyperalgesia were assessed. MDT and MPT were quantified adjacent to the stimulation site. Tactile hypaesthesia in pain patients and in experimental pain (MDT-z-scores: −0.66±0.30 and −0.42±0.15, respectively, both p<0.01) was paralleled by mechanical hyperalgesia (MPT-z-scores: +0.51±0.27, p<0.05; and +0.48±0.10, p<0.001). However, hypaesthesia and hyperalgesia were not correlated. Although 9 patients reported numbness, only 3 of them were able to delineate circumscript areas of tactile hypaesthesia. In experimental pain, the area of tactile hypaesthesia could be mapped in 31/40 experiments (78%). Irrespective of the mode of nociceptive stimulation (phasic vs. tonic) tactile hypaesthesia and hyperalgesia developed with a similar time course and disappeared within approximately 1 day. Hypaesthesia (numbness) often encountered in clinical pain can be reproduced by experimental nociceptive stimulation. The time course of effects suggests a mechanism involving central plasticity.

Keywords: Tactile hypaesthesia, Experimental pain, Neuropathic pain, Myofascial pain, Central plasticity, Mechanical hyperalgesia

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PII: S0304-3959(08)00136-X

doi:10.1016/j.pain.2008.03.006

PAIN
Volume 139, Issue 1 , Pages 73-81, 30 September 2008