Objectives: The effects of thalamic stimulation of the anterior part of the ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPLa) for central poststroke pain (CPSP) and the pain-related electrophysiological characteristics of this structure were investigated.
Materials and methods: Nine patients with CPSP manifesting as hemibody pain were enrolled. Stereotactic thalamic VPLa stimulation was implemented, and intraoperative electrophysiological studies on hyperactive and unstable discharges (HUDs) and responses to sensory and electrical stimulation were performed in the sensory thalamus. A preoperative somatosensory-evoked potential (SEP) study was carried out in all nine patients and in eight other patients with localized pain.
Results: The patients were classified into two groups: a HUD-dominant group (group H, n = 5) and a sensory response-dominant group (group R, n = 4). HUDs were frequently encountered in the thalamic VPLa in the former group. The total number of HUDs and the number along the trajectory to the VPLa in group H were significantly larger than those in group R. The improvements on the pain numeric rating scale in group H were significantly higher than those in group R two years after surgery. The amplitude ratio of the SEP N20s in the ipsilateral to the contralateral side of CVD lesion in the study group was significantly lower than in the localized pain group.
Conclusions: Adequate and stable pain relief with thalamic VPLa stimulation is obtainable in patients with CPSP who exhibit hyperactivity and electrical instability along the trajectory to this nucleus. Both responders and nonresponders were found to have severe dysfunction of the lemniscal system.
Keywords: Central poststroke pain; deep brain stimulation; depth microrecording; somatosensory-evoked potential; thalamic VPLa.
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