Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6005117 | Brain Stimulation | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Our results do not provide evidence for a genuine anti-nociceptive effect of rTMS on acute physiological pain. We suggest that motor cortex rTMS may act upon high-order networks linked to the emotional and cognitive appraisal of chronic pain, and/or modulate pathologically sensitized networks, rather than change the physiological transmission within an intact nervous system. Such dichotomy is reminiscent of that observed with most drugs used for neuropathic pain.
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Authors
Claire Bradley, Caroline Perchet, Taïssia Lelekov-Boissard, Michel Magnin, Luis Garcia-Larrea,