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Central sensitization and secondary hyperalgesia

Patients with neuropathic pain do not only show negative symptoms (i.e. a sensory deficit) related to the impairment of somatosensory pathways. Instead, they also show, paradoxical positive symptoms (ongoing pain, hyperalgesia and allodynia), indicating an increased responsiveness of nociceptive pathways. A prominent positive sign of neuropathic pain is increased sensitivity to noxious mechanical stimulation (mechanical or pinprick hyperalgesia). At present, there is no reliable and objective laboratory toolto assess these changes in the neural responsiveness to mechanonociceptive input. The mechanisms underlying these positive symptoms are different from those underlying the negative symptoms, and involve activity-dependent changes in both the peripheral and the central nervous system. Some patients can have a severe impairment without positive symptoms, while other patients can have a mild impairment but severe positive symptoms.

The mechanical hyperalgesia observed in patients with neuropathic pain is very similar to the mechanical hyperalgesia that can be induced by the sustained activation of nociceptors in healthy volunteers ("secondary hyperalgesia"). There is convincing evidence that mechanical hyperalgesia results from a facilitation of nociceptive transmission at the level of the spinal cord, i.e. central sensitization.

In an attempt to develop a biomarker for central sensitization, we recently conducted a study in which we recorded pinprick evoked brain potentials (PEPs) in the area of experimentally induced secondary mechanical hyperalgesia in healthy volunteers. We showed that when pinprick stimuli are applied in the area of secondary mechanical hyperalgesia, PEPs were significantly increased as compared to the responses elicited by stimulation of normal skin. Moreover, in a second study, we showed that this enhancement of PEPs is long lasting and follows the same time course as the mechanical hyperalgesia. These promising results suggest that the recording of PEPs could be used as a diagnostic tool to assess the positive symptoms of neuropathic pain.

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Researchers involved

Publications

2019

Central sensitization increases the pupil dilation elicited by mechanical pinprick stimulation

Journal of Neurophysiology

van den Broeke EN, Hartgerink DM, Butler J, Lambert J, Mouraux A.

121(5):1621-1632

2018

No evidence of widespread mechanical pressure hyperalgesia after experimentally-induced central sensitization via skin nociceptors

Pain Reports

Cayrol T, Pitance L, Roussel N, Mouraux A, van den Broeke EN.

3(6): e691

2018

Central sensitization and pain hypersensitivity: some critical considerations

F1000 Research

van den Broeke EN.

2018

High frequency electrical stimulation induces a long-lasting enhancement of event-related potentials but does not change the perception elicited by intra-epidermal electrical stimuli delivered to the area of increased mechanical pinprick sensitivity

PLoS One

Manresa JB, Andersen OK, Mouraux A, van den Broeke EN.

13(9):e0203365

2018

Quickly-responding C-fiber nociceptors contribute to heat hypersensitivity in the area of secondary hyperalgesia

Journal of Physiology

Lenoir C, Plaghki L, Mouraux A, van den Broeke EN.

in press

2018

Central sensitization: explanation or phenomenon?

Clinical Psychological Science

van den Broeke EN, Torta DM, Van den Bergh O.

in press

2018

No perceptual prioritization of non-nociceptive vibrotactile and visual stimuli presented on a sensitized body part

Nature: Scientific Reports

Torta D, Filbrich L, van den Broeke E, Legrain V.

8(1):5359

2017

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Inflammation-associated regulation of RGS in astrocytes and putative implication in neuropathic pain

Journal of Neuroinflammation

Doyen PJ, Vergouts M, Pochet A, Desmet N, van Neerven S, Brook G, Hermans E.

14(1):209

2017

Phase-locked and non-phase-locked EEG responses to pinprick stimulation before and after experimentally-induced secondary hyperalgesia

Clinical Neurophysiology

van den Broeke EN, de Vries B, Lambert J, Torta DM, Mouraux A.

128(8):1445-1456

2017

Intense pain influences the cortical processing of visual stimuli projected onto the sensitized skin

Pain

Torta DM, van den Broeke EN, Filbrich L, Jacob B, Lambert J, Mouraux A.

158(4):691-697

2016

Central sensitization of mechanical nociceptive pathways is associated with a long-lasting increase of pinprick-evoked brain potentials

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience

van den Broeke E, Lambert J, Huang G, Mouraux A.

0.785416667

2016

Secondary hyperalgesia is mediated by heat-insensitive A-fiber nociceptors

Journal of Physiology

van den Broeke E, Lenoir C, Mouraux A.

594(22):6767-6776

Institute of Neuroscience (IONS) - Université catholique de Louvain (UCL)

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NOCIONS : PAIN RESEARCH AT UCLOUVAIN

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