Publications by authors named "Sigrid Schuh-Hofer"

Article Synopsis
  • - The term "nociplastic pain" describes pain that arises from a sensitized nociceptive system, yet cannot be classified as nociceptive or neuropathic, leading researchers to evaluate a new grading system for distinguishing chronic pain types.
  • - The study involved 81 patients with conditions like fibromyalgia, complex regional pain syndrome, osteoarthritis, and peripheral nerve injury, using various methods to classify their pain as nociplastic; results showed that most chronic primary pain was widespread and not due to clear nociceptive or neuropathic mechanisms.
  • - Despite the grading system having good specificity (93%) when identifying pain types, its sensitivity was low (60%) and inadequate for screening, indicating a need for improvements,
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Background: Clinical trials have shown that cenobamate (CNB) is an efficacious and safe anti-seizure medication (ASM) for drug-resistant focal epilepsy. Here, we analyzed one of the largest real-world cohorts, covering the entire spectrum of epilepsy syndromes, the efficacy and safety of CNB, and resulting changes in concomitant ASMs.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective observational study investigating CNB usage in two German tertiary referral centers between October 2020 and June 2023 with follow-up data up to 27 months of treatment.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how different stages of sleep, particularly REM sleep, affect neural activity and memory consolidation in both rodents and humans.
  • It highlights the importance of non-oscillatory brain activity during REM sleep, suggesting that it helps recalibrate neural networks.
  • The extent of this recalibration during REM is linked to better overnight memory retention, demonstrating a specific mechanism by which REM sleep enhances long-term memory.
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Investigating nocifensive withdrawal reflexes as potential surrogate marker for the spinal excitation level may widen the understanding of maladaptive nociceptive processing after spinal cord injury (SCI). The aim of this prospective, explorative cross-sectional observational study was to investigate the response behavior of individuals with SCI to noxious radiant heat (laser) stimuli and to assess its relation to spasticity and neuropathic pain, two clinical consequences of spinal hyperexcitability/spinal disinhibition. Laser stimuli were applied at the sole and dorsum of the foot and below the fibula head.

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Many individuals with chronic musculoskeletal pain (CMP) show impairments in their pain-modulatory capacity. Although stress plays an important role in chronic pain, it is not known if stress-induced analgesia (SIA) is affected in patients with CMP. We investigated SIA in 22 patients with CMP and 18 pain-free participants.

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Background And Purpose: Diabetic sensorimotor peripheral neuropathy is usually considered to affect predominantly the lower limbs (LL-N), whereas the impact of upper limb neuropathy (UL-N) on hand functional performance and quality of life (QoL) has not been evaluated systematically. This study aims to investigate the prevalence and characteristics of UL-N and its functional and psychosocial consequences in type 2 diabetes.

Methods: Individuals with type 2 diabetes (n = 141) and an age- and sex-matched control group (n = 73) underwent comprehensive assessment of neuropathy, hand functional performance, and psychosocial status.

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Background And Aims: Healthy women have generally been found to have increased experimental pain perception and chronic pain has a higher prevalence in female as compared to male patients. However, no study has investigated whether pain intensity and pain perception thresholds are distinct or similar between sexes within various chronic pain entities. We investigated whether average pain intensities and pain thresholds assessed using quantitative sensory testing (QST) differed between women and men suffering from three distinct chronic pain conditions: Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS type I), peripheral nerve injury (PNI) or polyneuropathy (PNP), as compared to paired healthy volunteers.

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Studies on magnetic resonance neurography (MRN) in diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN) have found proximal sciatic nerve lesions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the functional relevance of sciatic nerve lesions in DPN, with the expectation of correlations with the impairment of large-fiber function. Sixty-one patients with type 2 diabetes (48 with and 13 without DPN) and 12 control subjects were enrolled and underwent MRN, quantitative sensory testing, and electrophysiological examinations.

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Background: Thermo-test devices are rarely used outside specialized pain centres because of high acquisition costs. Recently, a new, portable device ("Q-Sense") was introduced, which is less expensive but has reduced cooling capacity (20°C). We assessed the reliability/validity of the "Q-Sense" by comparing it with the Thermal Sensory Analyzer (TSA).

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Purpose: Corneal confocal microscopy (CCM) is an imaging method to detect loss of nerve fibers in the cornea. The impact of image quality on the CCM parameters has not been investigated. We developed a quality index (QI) with 3 stages for CCM images and compared the influence of the image quality on the quantification of corneal nerve parameters using 2 modes of analysis in healthy volunteers and patients with known peripheral neuropathy.

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Aims: The aim of the study was to assess whether quantitative-sensory-testing could be used to evaluate prevalence and predictors of diabetic neuropathy (DPNP) in patients with pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes.

Methods: Twenty-eight pre-diabetics and 108 patients with type 2 diabetes were evaluated using neuropathy-deficit-score (NDS), neuropathy-symptom-score (NSS), nerve-conduction-studies (NCS), short-QST-protocol to examine small fibers and the comprehensive QST-battery (long-QST) according to the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain protocol.

Results: Long-QST revealed a DPNP-prevalence of 71% in pre-diabetics and 95% in patients with type 2 diabetes, while according to NDS it was only 11% and 63%, and NCS missed 58% of patients with DPNP.

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Background: Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is an established treatment option for patients with refractory chronic pain conditions. While effects of SCS on dorsal horn neuronal circuitries are intensively studied, current knowledge on the impact of SCS on descending pain pathways is scarce and relies on preclinical data. We aimed to address this topic and hypothesized a significant effect of SCS on descending pain modulation.

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Disturbed sleep is known to substantially aggravate both the pain condition and the affective state of pain patients. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these adverse effects are unknown. Oxytocin (OT), being largely involved in social and emotional behavior, is considered to also play a modulatory role in nociception.

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As an indirect approach to relate previously identified sensory phenotypes of patients suffering from peripheral neuropathic pain to underlying mechanisms, we used a published sorting algorithm to estimate the prevalence of denervation, peripheral and central sensitization in 657 healthy subjects undergoing experimental models of nerve block (NB) (compression block and topical lidocaine), primary hyperalgesia (PH) (sunburn and topical capsaicin), or secondary hyperalgesia (intradermal capsaicin and electrical high-frequency stimulation), and in 902 patients suffering from neuropathic pain. Some of the data have been previously published. Randomized split-half analysis verified a good concordance with a priori mechanistic sensory profile assignment in the training (79%, Cohen κ = 0.

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Sex matters both in the clinical field of pain and sleep medicine. Sleep disturbances are highly prevalent in chronic pain patients and have been shown to deteriorate the pain condition. The pathomechanisms by which insomnia aggravates pain are currently unknown.

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In a recent cluster analysis, it has been shown that patients with peripheral neuropathic pain can be grouped into 3 sensory phenotypes based on quantitative sensory testing profiles, which are mainly characterized by either sensory loss, intact sensory function and mild thermal hyperalgesia and/or allodynia, or loss of thermal detection and mild mechanical hyperalgesia and/or allodynia. Here, we present an algorithm for allocation of individual patients to these subgroups. The algorithm is nondeterministic-ie, a patient can be sorted to more than one phenotype-and can separate patients with neuropathic pain from healthy subjects (sensitivity: 78%, specificity: 94%).

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Chronic or neuropathic trigeminal facial pain can be challenging to treat. Neurosurgical procedures should be applied when conservative treatment fails. Neuromodulation techniques for chronic facial pain include deep brain stimulation and motor cortex stimulation, which are complex to perform.

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Background: Neurosurgical pain management of drug-resistant trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is highly challenging. Microvascular decompression is a first-line neurosurgical approach for classical TN with neurovascular conflict, but can show clinical relapse despite proper decompression. Second-line destructive techniques like radiofrequency thermocoagulation have become reluctantly used due to their potential for irreversible side effects.

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Background: The capsaicin and heat responsive ion channel TRPV1 is expressed on trigeminal nociceptive neurons and has been implicated in the pathophysiology of migraine attacks. Here we investigate the efficacy of two TRPV1 channel antagonists in blocking trigeminal activation using two in vivo models of migraine.

Methods: Male Sprague-Dawley rats were used to study the effects of the TRPV1 antagonists JNJ-38893777 and JNJ-17203212 on trigeminal activation.

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Sleep disturbances are highly prevalent in chronic pain patients. Understanding their relationship has become an important research topic since poor sleep and pain are assumed to closely interact. To date, human experimental studies exploring the impact of sleep disruption/deprivation on pain perception have yielded conflicting results.

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Objective: Pro-inflammatory cytokines like Interleukin-1 beta (IL-1β) have been implicated in the pathophysiology of migraine and inflammatory pain. The trigeminal ganglion and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) are crucial components in the pathophysiology of primary headaches. 5-HT1B/D receptor agonists, which reduce CGRP release, and cyclooxygenase (COX) inhibitors can abort trigeminally mediated pain.

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This paper presents the results of a prospective observational cohort study investigating referral practices to six specialized pain centres (SPCs) in 303 patients with headache (HD), low back pain (LBP), and neuropathic pain (NP). The study was divided into three parts. Part 1: The pain health care history (contacts with general practitioners and specialists, further referrals, time spans, therapies) before first contact with the SPC.

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For decades, serotonin has been speculated to play a major role in migraine pathophysiology. The central serotonergic system is located in the raphe nuclei and the adjacent reticular formation in the brainstem. Recently, radioligands targeting the brain serotonin transport protein (SERT) have been developed.

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