Painful Stimuli Evoke Potentials Recorded Over the Human Anterior Cingulate Gyrus
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 79 (4), 2231-2234
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.1998.79.4.2231
Abstract
F. A. Lenz, M. Rios, A. Zirh, D. Chau, G. Krauss, and R. P. Lesser. Painful stimuli evoke potentials recorded over the human anterior cingulate gyrus. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 2231–2234, 1998. Clinical studies of cingulotomy patients and imaging studies predict that the human cingulate gyrus might display pain-related activity. We now report potentials evoked by painful cutaneous stimulation with a CO2 laser (LEP) and recorded from subdural electrodes over the medial wall of the hemisphere. In response to facial laser stimulation on both sides, a negative (latency 211–242 ms) and then a positive wave (325–352 ms) were recorded from the cortex of right medial wall and from the falcine dura overlying the left medial wall. Medial wall LEPs were similar to scalp LEPs and were largest over the anterior cingulate and superior frontal gyri just anterior to motor cortex contralateral to the side of stimulation. These results demonstrate that there is significant direct nociceptive input to the human anterior cingulate gyrus (Brodmann's area 24).Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neuroperceptual Differences in Consonant and Vowel Discrimination: As Revealed by Direct Cortical Electrical InterferenceCortex, 1997
- Functional imaging of an illusion of painNature, 1996
- Pain-related magnetic fields following painful CO2 laser stimulation in manNeuroscience Letters, 1995
- Distributed processing of pain and vibration by the human brainJournal of Neuroscience, 1994
- Positron emission tomographic analysis of cerebral structures activated specifically by repetitive noxious heat stimuliJournal of Neurophysiology, 1994
- Variability of laser-evoked potentials: attention, arousal and lateralized differencesElectroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology/Evoked Potentials Section, 1993
- MOVEMENT-RELATED POTENTIALS RECORDED FROM SUPPLEMENTARY MOTOR AREA AND PRIMARY MOTOR AREABrain, 1992
- Correlation of subjective pain experience with cerebral evoked responses to noxious thermal stimulationsExperimental Brain Research, 1978
- Stereotactic Anterior Cingulate Lesions for Persistent Pain: A Report on 68 CasesNeurosurgery, 1974
- Pain “Relief” by Frontal CingulumotomyJournal of Neurosurgery, 1962