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. 1999 Oct 23;354(9188):1464-6.
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(99)05003-5.

Cortical origin of pathological pain

Affiliations

Cortical origin of pathological pain

A J Harris. Lancet. .

Abstract

Pain without accompanying tissue pathology poses a classic puzzle, presented in extreme form by phantom pain in a non-existent amputated limb. A clue to the origin of such pain is given by the recent discovery of a region of cortex active in response to incongruence between motor intention, awareness of movement, and visual feedback. Phantom-limb sensation, and repetitive strain injuries or focal hand dystonias in writers, musicians, or keyboard operators, are accompanied by plastic changes in sensorimotor cortex and by pathological pain. Disorganised or inappropriate cortical representation of proprioception may falsely signal incongruence between motor intention and movement, which results in pathological pain in the same way that incongruence between vestibular and visual sensation results in motion sickness.

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  • Cortical origins of pathological pain.
    McCabe CS, Blake DR, Skevington SM. McCabe CS, et al. Lancet. 2000 Jan 22;355(9200):318-9. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(05)72316-3. Lancet. 2000. PMID: 10675099 No abstract available.

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