While mirror-image pain affects only 3 percent of stroke patients, recent findings highlight why this rare complication deserves clinical attention. New research demonstrates that bilateral pain may result from inflammation driven by lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) that crosses between brain hemispheres via the corpus callosum. In contrast, the majority of stroke patients experience unilateral pain (85%), with some experiencing no significant pain at all (12%). Understanding the inflammatory mechanisms underlying this atypical presentation is crucial for clinicians managing complex post-stroke cases. The identification of LPA as a key mediator suggests that anti-inflammatory interventions targeting this pathway could offer relief to the small but vulnerable population experiencing bilateral symptoms.
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