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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > What Clinicians Need to Know About Mirror-Image Pain After Stroke: Three Key Research Findings

What Clinicians Need to Know About Mirror-Image Pain After Stroke: Three Key Research Findings

GMJ
Last updated: 10/07/2026 02:07
By
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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1 Min Read
Brain diagram showing stroke-related inflammation crossing between hemispheres causing bilateral pain
New research reveals that rare bilateral pain after stroke may result from LPA-driven inflammation crossing between brain hemispheres. Understanding this mechanism could lead to targeted treatments for mirror-image post-stroke pain. — Photo: AI25.Studio AI GENERATIVE / Pexels
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1 min read|113 words

Recent research provides three critical insights for clinicians managing post-stroke pain. First, LPA-driven inflammation can cross the corpus callosum—the neural bridge connecting brain hemispheres—spreading inflammatory signals beyond the initial stroke site. Second, this mechanism fundamentally differs from typical unilateral post-stroke pain, creating bilateral, symmetrical symptoms that challenge standard neurological expectations. Third, understanding this inflammatory pathway opens doors to targeted therapeutic approaches rather than generalized pain management strategies. For clinicians encountering patients with atypical bilateral pain presentations, these findings suggest that investigating LPA-mediated inflammation may reveal treatable underlying mechanisms. This mechanistic understanding enables more precise interventions tailored to the actual biological processes driving symptoms, potentially improving outcomes for this vulnerable patient population.

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ByProf. Giorgi Pkhakadze
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Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD, is Editor-in-Chief of the Georgian Medical Journal and Chair of the Public Health Institute of Georgia (PHIG). He is Professor and Head of the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at David Tvildiani Medical University, and Secretary/Treasurer of the UEMS Section of Public Health. ORCID: 0000-0001-7609-4515.

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