Publication | Closed Access
Congenital Insensitivity to Noxious Stimuli
52
Citations
33
References
1975
Year
Affective NeuroscienceNeuropathic PainPeripheral Nervous SystemSocial SciencesTooth PulpCongenital DisordersNeurologyAbnormal DevelopmentSensationElectrical StimulationMedicineCerebral-evoked PotentialsNeurostimulationNervous SystemExperimental PsychologyPain ResearchDevelopmental AnomalyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPediatricsElectrophysiologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemPain MechanismCongenital InsensitivityEmotion
Cerebral-evoked potentials were used to study a 25-year-old man, the older of two siblings with congenital insensitivity to all noxious stimuli, gross impairment of temperature perception, and anhidrosis. Electrical stimulation of tooth pulp consistently eliciting pain and cerebral responses in normal subjects evoked neither cerebral potentials nor painful or other sensations in our patient. However, ordinarily painful electric shocks to the skin of his face evoked cerebral responses as well as sensations lacking disagreeable qualities. Those cerebral potentials elicited by electrical stimulation of the median nerve, clicks, and light flashes were within normal limits. These findings strongly suggest that a defect in transmission of noxious impulses presumably involving first order sensory neurons exists in our patient.
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