Publication | Closed Access
Pain Relief by Electrical Stimulation of the Central Gray Matter in Humans and Its Reversal by Naloxone
747
Citations
31
References
1977
Year
Pain TherapyPain MedicineIntractable PainNeuropathic PainAnalgesiaElectronic StimulationStimulation DevicePain ManagementNeurologyHealth SciencesElectrical StimulationNeuropharmacologyCentral Gray MatterNeurostimulationPain TreatmentPain ResearchPain ReliefNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemPain MechanismAnesthesiaMedicineHuman PatientsAnesthesiology
Relief of intractable pain was produced in six human patients by stimulation of electrodes permanently implanted in the periventricular and periaqueductal gray matter. The level of stimulation sufficient to induce pain relief seems not to alter the acute pain threshold. Indiscriminate repetitive stimulation produced tolerance to both stimulation-produced pain relief and the analgesic action of narcotic medication; this process could be reversed by abstinence from stimulation. Stimulation-produced relief of pain was reversed by naloxone in five out of six patients. These results suggest that satisfactory alleviation of persistent pain in humans may be obtained by electronic stimulation.
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