Publication | Closed Access
The Thermal Grill Illusion: Unmasking the Burn of Cold Pain
486
Citations
31
References
1994
Year
Pain MedicineAffective NeuroscienceNeuropathic PainPainful HeatThermal TherapySocial SciencesPain SyndromeNeurologySensationCognitive ScienceCold PainNervous SystemThermal Grill IllusionPain ResearchThermographyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNeurosciencePain MechanismCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
In Thunberg's thermal grill illusion, first demonstrated in 1896, a sensation of strong, often painful heat is elicited by touching interlaced warm and cool bars to the skin. Neurophysiological recordings from two classes of ascending spinothalamic tract neurons that are sensitive to innocuous or noxious cold showed differential responses to the grill. On the basis of these results, a simple model of central disinhibition, or unmasking, predicted a quantitative correspondence between grill-evoked pain and cold-evoked pain, which was verified psychophysically. This integration of pain and temperature can explain the thermal grill illusion and the burning sensation of cold pain and may also provide a basis for the cold-evoked, burning pain of the classic thalamic pain syndrome.
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