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Altered sensory-motor plasticity in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and complex regional pain type I syndrome: a shared mechanism?

Dario RicciardiVincenzo TodiscoGioacchino TedeschiFrancesca TrojsiGiovanni Cirillo
Published in: Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology (2020)
Besides the prominent motor syndrome, some patients affected by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) complain of many non-motor symptoms during the disease course, in particular chronic pain that significantly reduces the patients' quality of life. Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a rare painful condition, rarely described in ALS patients. We present the clinical case of a patient affected by spinal-onset ALS, who developed a type I CRPS (CRPS-I) at the upper limbs. To the best of our knowledge, only five cases of ALS-CRPS-I have been reported and they share some peculiar features: ALS spinal-onset with classic phenotype, rapid deterioration of quality of life, and a poor prognosis. Different mechanisms have been supposed in the pathogenesis of both CRPS and ALS, resulting in distinctive clinical presentations. Altered plasticity of brain sensory and motor areas might represent a common feature that seems to influence negatively ALS progression and prognosis.
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