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European Heart Journal 1993 14(1):96-105;
Copyright © 1993 by the European Society of Cardiology.
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© 1993 The European Society of Cardiology

A mechanism of cardiac pain suppression by spinal cord stimulation: implications for patients with angina pectoris

M. J. CHANDLER*,, T. J. BRENNAN*, D. W. GARRISON{dagger}, K. S. KIM{ddagger}, P. J. SCHWARTZ§ and R. D. FOREMAN*

*Department of Physiology and Biophysics, College of Medicine Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190, U.S.A.
{dagger}Department of Physical Therapy, College of Allied Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190, U.S.A.
{dagger}Department of Physiology, Hanyang University Seoul 133-792, Korea
§Unitá di Studio delle Aritmie, Centro di Fisiologia Clinica e Ipertensione, Istituto di Clinica Medica II, Universitá degli Studi di Milano Milan, Italy

Received 24 June 1992; .

Correspondence: Margaret J. Chandler, PhD, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Post Office Box 26901, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73190. U.S.A

Abstract

Clinical reports show that electrical stimulation of the spinal cord reduces symptoms of angina pectoris, but so far have not provided evidence on the mechanisms involved. The hypothesis for this study was that inhibition of spinothalamic tract transmission may account for this result. Extracellular potentials of 28 spinothalamic tract neurons were recorded in anaesthetized monkeys, and the effects of dorsal column stimulation were determined on activity evoked by cardiac and somatic stimuli. Dorsal column stimulation reduced the number of cell potentials evoked by electrical stimulation of cardiopulmonary sympathetic afferent fibres in 11 spinothalamic tract cells tested. Activity evoked by intracardiac injection of bradykinin was decreased by dorsal column stimulation in six of seven neurons that responded to chemical stimulation of afferents. Differential effects of dorsal column stimulation were correlated to the cell responses to somatic field stimulation. Dorsal column stimulation inhibited activity in 12 of 12 neurons which were excited only by noxious pinch of somatic fields, whereas eight of 16 neurons which were excited by innocuous brushing of somatic fields were unaffected or excited. Transection of the dorsal column showed that the pathway transmitting inhibitory impulses descended from the stimulation site to the spinothalamic tract neurons examined. Results of this study are consistent with the concept that spinal cord stimulation reduces pain by decreasing the firing of spinothalamic tract cells which are activated by small fibre afferents. The paresthesias associated with nerve stimulation techniques may result from activation of spinothalamic tract cells which are excited by large fibre afferents. The clinical decision to employ spinal cord stimulation in patients with angina should balance the obvious benefit of pain relief against the risk of depriving the patient of an important warning signal while active myocardial ischaemia is in progress.

Key Words: Epidural spinal electrical stimulation • analgesia • spinothalamic tract • sympathetic reflexes


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