Pain Syndromes: Neuropathic Pain - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Pain Syndromes: Neuropathic Pain

Description:

Puechal X, Said G, Hilliquin P, et al. Peripheral neuropathy with necrotizing vasculitis in rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum. 1995;38:1618-1629. Raja SN, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:252
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: MarcoP155
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Pain Syndromes: Neuropathic Pain


1
Neuropathic Pain
2
Pain Pathophysiology
  • Nociceptive pain
  • Neuropathic pain

3
Nociceptive Pain
  • Sensitization and activation of healthy
    nociceptor endings and recruitment of silent
    nociceptors
  • Soup of inflammatory algogenic agents, such as
    protons, prostaglandins, bradykinin, serotonin,
    adenosine, histamine, cytokines

4
Mechanisms of Neuropathic Pain
  • Noninflammatory states
  • Inflammatory states

5
Pathophysiology of Neuropathic Pain
  • Ectopic activity in the peripheral pathways,
    including axons and DRG
  • CNS mechanisms

6
Neuropathic Pain Central Mechanisms
  • Peripheral neuropathic events can be complicated
    by temporary or long-term CNS changes, such as
    central sensitization and then reorganization of
    the pain pathways at the dorsal horn level

7
Neuropathic Pain and SMP
  • Some neuropathic pains are sustained, at least in
    part, by sympathetic efferent activity
  • SMP
  • Expression of alpha-adrenergic receptors on
    injured C-fibers may be a relevant mechanism of
    SMP, but others are possible
  • Clinical findings consistent with CRPS signal an
    increased likelihood of SMP

8
Nociceptive Pain
Neuropathic Pain
PNS peripheral nervous system
PNS
Peripheral sensitization

Healthy nociceptors
Abnormal nociceptors
CNS
CNS central nervous system
Central sensitization
Normal transmission
Central reorganization
Physiologic state
Pathologic state
Pappagallo M. 2001.
9
Neuropathic Pain
  • Diverse syndromes with uncertain classification
  • Mononeuropathies and polyneuropathies
  • CRPS
  • Deafferentation syndromes, including central pain

10
Painful Mononeuropathies and Polyneuropathies
  • Diabetic neuropathies
  • Entrapment neuropathies
  • Shingles and postherpetic neuralgia
  • Trigeminal and other CNS neuralgias
  • HIV-related neuropathy
  • Neuropathy due to malignant disease
  • Neuropathy due to rheumatoid arthritis, systemic
    lupus erythematosus, Sjögrens syndrome
  • Idiopathic distal small-fiber neuropathy

11
Painful Mononeuropathies and Polyneuropathies
  • Neuropathies due to toxins arsenic, thallium,
    alcohol, vincristine, cisplatinum,
    didioxynucleosides
  • Amyloid polyneuropathy primary and familial
  • Neuropathies with monoclonal proteins
  • Vasculitic neuropathy
  • Neuropathy associated with Guillain-Barré
    syndrome
  • Neuropathy associated with Fabrys disease

12
Neuropathic Pain Clinical Assessment
  • A comprehensive diagnostic approach to patients
    affected by neuropathic pain
  • Medical history
  • Examinations general, neurologic, regional
  • Diagnostic workup imaging studies, laboratory
    tests, nerve/skin biopsies, electromyography/nerve
    -conduction velocity (EMG-NCV) studies, selected
    nerve blocks

13
Medical History
  • Ask patient about complaints suggestive of
  • Neurologic deficits persistent numbness in a
    body area or limb-weakness, for example, tripping
    episodes, inability to open jars
  • Neurologic sensory dysfunction touch-evoked
    pain, intermittent abnormal sensations,
    spontaneous burning and shooting pains

14
Neurologic and Regional Examinations
  • In patients with neuropathic pain, examination
    should focus on the anatomic pattern and
    localization of the abnormal sensory symptoms and
    neurologic deficits

15
Neuropathic Pain Clinical Characteristics
  • Burning, shooting, electrical-quality pain
  • May be aching, throbbing, sharp
  • Neuropathic sensations dysesthesias, paresthesias

16
Neuropathic Sensations
  • Paresthesias abnormal spontaneous,
    intermittent, painless
  • Dysesthesias abnormal spontaneous or
    touch-evoked, unpleasant

17
Neuropathic Pain Evoked Dysesthesias
  • Allodynia pain elicited by a nonnoxious stimulus
    (clothing, air movement, touch)
  • Mechanical (induced by light pressure)
  • Thermal (induced by a nonpainful cold or warm
    stimulus)
  • Hyperalgesia exaggerated pain response to a
    mildly noxious (mechanical or thermal) stimulus
  • Hyperpathia delayed and explosive pain response
    to a noxious stimulus

18
Primary Hyperalgesia
  • Present in the primary zone, at the location of
    injury
  • Characterized by pinprick hyperalgesia warm and
    heat hyperalgesia static mechanical allodynia
    (tenderness)
  • Indicative of PNS sensitization

19
Secondary Hyperalgesia
  • Present in the zone surrounding an injury
  • Characterized by dynamic mechanical allodynia
    cold hyperalgesia
  • Indicative of CNS sensitization

20
Diagnostic Workup Lab Tests
  • Complete blood cell count with differential,
    erythrocyte sedimentation rate, chemistry profile
  • Thyroid-function tests, vitamin B12 and folate,
    fasting blood sugar, and glycosylated hemoglobin
  • Serum protein electrophoresis with immunofixation
  • Lyme titers, hepatitis B and C, HIV screening
  • Antinuclear antibodies, rheumatoid factor,
    Sjögrens titers (SS-A, SS-B), antineutrophil
    cytoplasmic antibody

21
Diagnostic Workup Lab Tests
  • Cryoglobulins
  • Antisulfatide antibody titers, anti-HU titers
  • Heavy metals serum and urine screens
  • Cerebrospinal fluid study for demyelinating
    diseases and meningeal carcinomatosis

22
Diagnostic Workup Electrophysiologic Studies
  • EMG-NCV and QST
  • To localize pain-generator/nerve or root lesion
  • To rule out
  • Axonal vs focal segmental demyelination
  • Underlying small-fiber or mixed polyneuropathy

23
Biopsies
  • Nerve (eg, sural nerve) to diagnose vasculitis,
    amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, etc.
  • Skin to evaluate density of unmyelinated fibers
    within dermis and epidermis

24
Neuropathic Pain Management
  • Pharmacotherapy
  • Nonopioid
  • Opioid
  • Adjuvant analgesics
  • Interventional
  • Neural blockade (eg, sympathetic nerve blocks)
  • Neurostimulatory techniques (eg, spinal cord
    stimulation)
  • Intraspinal infusion

25
Neuropathic PainPharmacologic Therapies
  • Gabapentin, carbamazepine, lamotrigine, and newer
    AEDs
  • Antidepressants
  • Opioid analgesics
  • Lidocaine (transdermal, intravenous IV),
    mexiletine
  • Alpha-2 adrenergic agonists

26
Neuropathic Pain Management
  • Rehabilitative approaches
  • Psychologic interventions

27
Conclusions
  • More effective medical therapies for neuropathic
    pain are becoming available and physicians should
    use them to limit unnecessary suffering, with the
    ultimate goal of significantly improving
    patients quality of life

28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com