Introduction: Déjerine and Roussy reported thalamic syndrome, chronic pain after a vascular lesion in the thalamus, in 1906. Posterior clinical observations allowed know that the same clinical picture can be observed after lesions in other parts of the central nervous system. Due to the fact that the more frequent etiology is vascular, nowadays the term central poststroke pain syndrome is preferred.
Clinical case: We report a patient who suffered a left subinsular hematoma when he was 62 years old. Four years later he started complaining burning constant pain in the right side of the body with crisis of lancinating pain. Also allodynia was observed in the face and right arm. MRI disclosed a necrotic lesion at the level of the left subinsular region.
Conclusions: The lancinating pain and the allodynia were properly controlled by deep brain stimulation with an electrode placed stereotactically at the level of VPL nucleus of the left thalamus. Five months later there was a recurrence of the pain, a CT disclosed a tumour in the parietal region with an important shift of the midline and migration of the electrode out the thalamus. A biopsy disclosed tumoral necrosis. The pathophysiology of the central poststroke pain and effectivity of the deep brain stimulation in this cases are discussed.