Complete resolution of postherpetic neuralgia following pallidotomy: case report

Author:

De Vloo Philippe12,Milosevic Luka34,Gramer Robert M.14,Aguirre-Padilla David Hernán1,Dallapiazza Robert F.1,Lee Darrin J.1,Hutchison William D.34,Fasano Alfonso45,Lozano Andres M.14

Affiliation:

1. Division of Neurosurgery, Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

2. Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospitals Leuven, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium;

3. Department of Physiology, Toronto Western Hospital and University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada;

4. Krembil Research Institute, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and

5. Division of Neurology, The Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson’s Disease and the Morton and Gloria Shulman Movement Disorders Clinic, Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

The authors report on a female patient with left-dominant Parkinson’s disease with motor fluctuations and levodopa-induced dyskinesias and comorbid postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), who underwent a right-sided pallidotomy. Besides a substantial improvement in her Parkinson’s symptoms, she reported an immediate and complete disappearance of PHN. This neuralgia had been long-standing, pharmacologically refractory, and severe (preoperative Brief Pain Inventory [BPI] pain severity score of 8.0, BPI pain interference score of 7.3, short-form McGill Pain Questionnaire sensory pain rating index of 7 and affective pain rating index of 10, Present Pain Intensity rank value of 4, and visual analog scale score of 81 mm; all postoperative scores were 0). She continued to be pain free at 16 months postoperatively.This peculiar finding adds substantially to the largely unrecognized evidence for the role of the pallidum in pain processing, based on previous electrophysiological, metabolic, anatomical, pharmacological, and clinical observations. Therefore, the potential of the pallidum as a neurosurgical target for neuropathic pain warrants further investigation.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

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