Contact-Heat Evoked Potentials: Insights into Pain Processing in CRPS Type I.
Florin AllmendingerPaulina Simonne ScheurenIara De SchoenmackerFlorian BrunnerJan RosnerArmin CurtMichèle HubliPublished in: Journal of pain research (2024)
This study provides neurophysiological evidence supporting an intact thermo-nociceptive pathway with signs of peripheral sensitization, such as hyperexcitable primary afferent nociceptors, in individuals with CRPS type I. This is further supported by the observation of mechanical and thermal gain of sensation only in the painful limb. Additionally, the increased CHEP amplitudes might be related to fear-induced alterations of nociceptive processing.