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2.
Pain Pract ; 1(1): 53-60, 2001 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17129284

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this study is to evaluate both painless and painful sensory transmission in patients with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) using the automated electrodiagnostic sensory Nerve Conduction Threshold (sNCT) test. This test generates reliable, painless Current Perception Threshold (CPT) and atraumatic Pain Tolerance Threshold (PTT) measures. Standardized CPT and PTT measures using constant alternating current sinusoid waveform stimulus at 3 different frequencies 5 Hz, 250 Hz, and 2 kHz (Neurometer CPT/C Neurotron, Inc. Baltimore, MD) were obtained from CRPS subjects at a distal phalange of the affected extremity and at an ipsilateral asymptomatic control site. Matched sites were tested on healthy subjects. Detection sensitivities for an abnormal PTT and CPT test were calculated based on specificity of 90% as determined from data obtained from healthy controls. A Spearman rank correlation was used to test for a significant association between presence of allodynia and an abnormal PTT or CPT at any frequency tested. Thirty-six CRPS subjects and 57 healthy controls were tested. The highest detection sensitivity of the PTT test from symptomatic test sites was 63% for the finger and 71% for the toe. PTT abnormalities were also detected, to a lesser degree, at the asymptomatic control site (41% finger control site, 16% toe control site). The highest CPT detection sensitivity at the symptomatic site was 37% for the finger site and 53% for the toe site. CPT abnormalities were also detected at the asymptomatic control site (29% finger control site, 37% toe control site). Eighty-six percent of the CRPS subjects had either a PTT or CPT abnormality at any frequency at the symptomatic site. There was a significant correlation between presence of allodynia and presence of an abnormal CPT and PTT, respectively (P < .01). The correlation coefficient was lower for CPT than for PTT, ie, 0.34 versus 0.6 for the finger and 0.48 versus 0.67 for the toe, respectively. In studied CRPS patients an abnormal PTT was detected with higher sensitivity than an abnormal CPT. Assessing PTT may become a useful electrodiagnostic quantitative sensory test for diagnosing and following the course of neuropathic pain conditions.

3.
Neuromodulation ; 3(3): 145-54, 2000 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22151462

ABSTRACT

Background. Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is being used with increasing frequency in the treatment of various chronic pain conditions. There is a paucity of reliable outcome data regarding changes in pain tolerance and peripheral sensory nerve function. The automated electrodiagnostic neuroselective sensory Nerve Conduction Threshold (sNCT) test measures painless current perception thresholds (CPTs) and atraumatic pain tolerance thresholds (PTTs). The ability of the sNCT test to independently evaluate small and large fiber function may have particular relevance for evaluating response to SCS. Methods/Results. Sixteen patients with implanted SCS systems and lower extremity neuropathic pain of greater than 6-months duration were tested using a standardized protocol, pre- and post-SCS. CPT and PTT measures (Neurometer, CPT/C Neurotron, Inc. Baltimore, MD) were obtained from the distal phalange of the most symptomatic extremity and at an ipsilateral asymptomatic control site. Only CPTs at the symptomatic site (2000 Hz only) and at the control site (5 Hz only) reached statistical significance. Changes in CPTs at other frequencies, and changes in PTTs at all frequencies (symptomatic and control sites) were not statistically significant. Conclusion. The results of this study appear to substantiate the postulates that both segmental and suprasegmental effects are involved in SCS-mediated analgesia. SCS modulates segmental large afferent fiber input as reflected by a statistically significant increase in large fiber CPTs (2000 Hz) at the symptomatic site post-SCS. A statistically significant increase in small fiber (5 Hz) CPTs at the control site suggests a central sensory (suprasegmental) modulating effect on nociceptive fiber activity. sNCT testing provided reliable outcome data for evaluating response to SCS.

4.
Am Heart J ; 137(6): 1185-94, 1999 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10347350

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Few studies have investigated the clinical advantages of surgical correction with the morphologic left ventricle (MLV) instead of the morphologic right ventricle as a systemic ventricle (SV) in patients with congenital heart disease. METHODS: Twenty-four healthy control subjects (group A1), 6 patients with isolated congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries (TGA) (group A2), 16 patients with TGA who had undergone an arterial switch operation (group B1), 18 patients with TGA who had undergone a venous switch operation (group B2), 9 patients with atrioventricular and ventriculoarterial discordance who had undergone a double switch operation (group C1), and 6 patients with atrioventricular and ventriculoarterial discordance who had undergone a conventional external conduit operation from the MLV to the pulmonary artery (group C2), performed treadmill exercise testing. Their heart rate (HR), oxygen uptake (VO2), and oxygen pulse (O2 pulse), which reflects individual stroke volume, were measured, and contractile function was assessed by echocardiography. RESULTS: The peak HR for the patients after a definitive operation were significantly lower than that in group A1 and was correlated with peak VO2 (r =.67, P <.0001). The peak VO2 and peak O2 pulse for the groups A2 and B2 were significantly lower than those for the groups A1 and B1, respectively. The peak O2 pulse data were strongly correlated with those of peak VO 2 (r = 0.91, P <.0001). The left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower in groups B1 and C1 than in group A1 and was correlated with peak VO 2 (r =.50, P <.01). No significant differences in VO2, HR, and O 2 pulse at peak exercise were observed between groups C1 and C2. CONCLUSIONS: Chronotropic incompetence and an impaired response of the stroke volume of the MRV during exercise are partly responsible for the reduced exercise capacity in groups A2 and B2 compared with groups with the MLV as an SV, and the SV function at rest is also related to exercise capacity. Superiority of the double-switch operation compared with the conventional conduit operation was not observed. A longer-term follow-up is necessary before the advantages of these 2 operations can be compared.


Subject(s)
Exercise Test , Heart Defects, Congenital/physiopathology , Ventricular Function, Left , Ventricular Function, Right , Adolescent , Analysis of Variance , Child , Child, Preschool , Echocardiography/statistics & numerical data , Exercise Test/statistics & numerical data , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Defects, Congenital/diagnostic imaging , Heart Defects, Congenital/surgery , Heart Ventricles/physiopathology , Hemodynamics , Humans , Infant , Postoperative Period , Pulmonary Gas Exchange , Regression Analysis , Respiratory Function Tests/statistics & numerical data
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