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Address correspondence to Katherine E. Galluzzi, DO, CMD, FACOFP distinguished, Professor and Chair, Department of Geriatric Medicine, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, 4190 City Ave, Suite 315, Philadelphia, PA 19131-1633. E-mail: katherineg{at}pcom.edu
Pain may be the most common reason patients seek treatment from physicians. When persistent and unrelieved, pain can frustrate both the person suffering with this condition and the physician trying to alleviate it. Relief from chronic pain may be particularly difficult to achieve and fraught with mis-conceptions. Treatment usually requires trials of physical, pharmacologic, and surgical interventions to achieve resolution. In cases that remain insoluble, patients must accept partial relief and seek adaptive strategies.
The source of persistent pain may be nociceptive or neuropathic. Both utilize the same nervous system pathways for transmission, but significant physiologic differences exist in the mechanism through which the body processes and resolves these painful stimuli. Nociceptive pain that results from a known or obvious source (eg, trauma, cancer metastasis, ischemia, arthritis) is often easy to identify. Neuropathic pain, however, may occur in the absence of an identifiable precipitating cause. Physicians must remain alert to differences in presentation and course of neuropathic pain syndromes, some of which may be subtle or unusual.
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Bennett3 provided incidence estimates of common types of neuropathic pain and concluded that if neuropathic low back pain is included in the total, approximately 3.8 million individuals in the United States alone suffer from this disorder. Bowsher4 calculated that there might be as many as 1 million patients with PHN in the United States. Such painful conditions are likely to increase as the population continues to age; eg, herpes zoster, diabetes mellitus, cerebrovascular accidents, Parkinson disease, and cancer are diseases of aging.
Diabetic peripheral neuropathy, second only to low back painassociated neuropathy, is estimated to account for 600 cases per 100,000 (Table 1); these cases are certain to increase as the population of those with diabetes mellitus continues to increase.
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| Neuropathic Versus Nociceptive Pain |
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Information regarding intensity, quality, and location of pain is conveyed to the sensory cortex from the somatosensory thalamus. The central nervous system utilizes descending inhibitory pathways via the dorsolateral fasciculus (Lissauer's tract) of the spinal cord and the periaqueductal gray matter to modulate transmission of nociceptive stimuli.5,6 Namaka et al7 characterize this as a complex equilibrium of pain-signaling and pain-relieving pathways connecting peripheral and central nervous systems.
Efficient, rapid transmission of acute responses to a painful stimulus is a self-protection process. Pain signals an "alarm" that leads to subsequent protective responses. Neuropathic pain, however, signals no imminent danger. The operative difference is that neuropathic pain represents a delayed, ongoing response to damage that is no longer acute which continues to be expressed as painful sensations.
Sensory neurons damaged by injury, disease, or drugs produce spontaneous discharges that lead to sustained levels of excitability. These ectopic discharges begin to "cross talk" with adjacent uninjured nerve fibers, resulting in amplification of the pain impulse (peripheral sensitization). This hyperexcitability leads to increased transmitter release causing increased response by spinal cord neurons (central sensitization). The process, known as "windup," accounts for the fact that the level of perceived pain is far greater than what is expected based on what can be observed.8,9
Painful nerve stimulation leads to activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors on the postsynaptic membrane in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord.6(pp207-228) Release of NMDA, a modulating neurotransmitter, is coupled with subsequent release of glutamate, an excitatory neurotransmitter. The resultant extended depolarization (influx of calcium and sodium and efflux of potassium) produces much larger than usual postsynaptic potentials, known as synaptic potentiation. Spinal windup has been described as "continuous increased excitability of central neuronal membranes with persistent potentiation"9,10 Neurons of the peripheral and central nervous system continue to transmit pain signals beyond the original injury, thus activating an ongoing, continuous central pain response (Figure 1). Devor et al11 presented evidence showing that damaged sensory fibers have a higher concentration of sodium channels, an alteration that would increase spontaneous firing.
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| Characterization of the Pain |
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Several common types of responses are elicited from patients with neuropathic pain (Table 2). These abnormal sensations, or dysesthesias, may occur alone, or they may occur in addition to other specific complaints. Unlike the usual response to nociceptive pain, the irritating or painful sensation occurs completely in the absence of an apparent cause. A common example is the severe, aching, "toothache-like" response elicited by a cool draft of air on the cheek of a patient suffering from trigeminal neuralgia.
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Allodynia is the term given to a painful response to an otherwise benign stimulus. Taken to the extreme (eg, inability to remove the stimulus), this response can result in the agonizing neuropathic symptom known as hyperpathia. Another example of allodynia is touch sensitivity of badly sunburned skin, where even light stroking of the inflamed area causes extreme discomfort; like neuropathic pain, this response seems out of proportion to the injury.
With respect to anesthesia or hypoesthesia, pharmacologic induction of this condition by lidocaine hydrochloride or fentanyl produces predictable half-lives and duration of action; this is not the case with neuropathic-induced anesthesia or hypoesthesia. The discomfort of one's foot "falling asleep" is a common paresthesia. That uncomfortable sensation is self-limiting and resolves spontaneously, unlike the continuous, self-perpetuating and annoying sensation of pins and needles caused by neuropathic pain.
| Pain Scales for Assessing Neuropathic Pain |
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Examples of standardized scales used for pain assessment include: the Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire (SF-MPQ),14 100-mm visual analog scales (VAS),15 numeric rating16 and faces scales,17 the Pain Disability Index,18 the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS),19 and the Neuropathic Pain Scale (NPS).20 These scales underscore the fact that it may be difficult for clinicians to assess or rate a patient's pain because the level of perceived pain may be much greater than what is observable. Pain scales provide useful, standardized, and validated tools for charting an individual's response to a pain-control intervention.
| Treatment |
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Adequate treatment trials demand a long-term commitment from both patient and physician.4 For any regimen to be effective, both adherence to the prescribed agent and adequate time for the trial are needed. As with many difficult medical problems, a multidisciplinary approach to treatment is often the most successful. A multidisciplinary pain relief team includes primary care physicians, neurologists, pain specialists such as anesthesiologists or neurosurgeons, psychiatrists, psychologists, pastoral counselors, advanced practice nurses, clinical pharmacologists, and others. As always, the most important member of this team is the patient.
Medications used to treat neuropathic pain include over-the-counter analgesics, anticonvulsants, tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), topical anesthetic agents, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), antiarrhythmics, narcotic analgesics, and opioids2,4,7 (Figure 2). This varied armamentarium reflects the heterogeneity of the patient group and the different pathophysiologic mechanisms postulated to produce neuropathic pain.
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Recently, Hansson and Dickenson23 noted that treatment of patients with neuropathy may be based on "shared commonalities despite multiple etiologies." They concluded their review by stating that because there is little information on drugs affecting specific pain symptoms and no clear rationale for their use, treatment trials are warranted.23 This conclusion supports the use of empiricism in selection of a treatment regimen for neuropathic pain.
Numerous treatment algorithms list trials of common analgesics such as ibuprofen or acetaminophen, topical treatment such as capsaicin cream or lidocaine patches, TCAs or other antidepressants (eg, amitriptyline hydrochloride, desipramine hydrochloride), and anticonvulsants (eg, carbamazepine, gabapentin, lamotrigine) as first-line therapy for neuropathic pain.5,7,9 These medications may be used alone or in combination. The choice of medication should be directed toward the type of painful symptom described.
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Commonalities in presentation may influence the clinician's choice of pain medication. For example, PHN and DPN may produce spasms, burning, and tingling characteristic of neuronal hyperexcitability. Nervous system excitability can produce seizure activity. Thus, anticonvulsants are used with reasonable efficacy to treat patients with neuropathic pain.7,8
| Anticonvulsants |
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-aminobutyric acid (GABA), a pain-modulating
neurotransmitter. Gabapentin readily crosses the blood-brain barrier and has
been studied for treatment of patients with DPN; pain relief efficacy was
similar to that of TCAs except for a shorter onset of action. In a study of
gabapentin as monotherapy, Backonja et
al21 noted that
relatively high doses were needed (3600 mg/d was the forced maximum dose, ie,
the target maximum dose). Higher doses, however, limited upward titration
because of side effects. The most common side effects were dizziness and
somnolence, but weight gain, nausea, abdominal pain, asthenia, and other
symptoms were also reported. Other anticonvulsants have been used for both PHN and DPN; eg, patients with trigeminal neuralgia have been treated with carbamazepine for decades. A recent study of divalproex sodium for PHN noted subjective improvement in the treatment versus placebo group and found significant side effects in only one patient.24 Trials of other anticonvulants, eg, lamotrigine, may be indicated in patients with neuropathic pain refractory to alternatives.
| Topical Anesthetic Agents |
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| Antidepressants |
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The advent of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) gave hope that they could be used for chronic pain without the concerns of cardiac toxicity and anticholinergic side effects. However, results have been disappointing. With the exception of duloxetine hydrochloride, SSRIs are not indicated for neuropathic pain; they may be useful adjuncts to treat patients who have pain with depression when TCAs are contraindicated. Duloxetine is a new SSRI which has received US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for the PHN indication.
Patients with neuropathic pain are prone to depression, drug dependency, and insomnia. Interrupted sleep is one of the most difficult problems facing patients with neuropathy, as there is no way to escape the discomforting symptom. Antidepressants and sedative-hypnotic medications may be prescribed as important adjunctive therapy for neuropathy.
| Antiarrythmics |
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| Anti-inflammatory Agents |
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| Opioid Analgesics |
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Tramadol hydrochloride, a semisynthetic opioid analgesic, may also affect neuropathic pain by low-affinity binding to mu receptors as well as having weak inhibition of norepinephrine and serotonin reuptake, mirroring the mechanism of action of both opioids and TCAs. One trial suggests that tramadol may be better tolerated than TCAs in some individuals with DPN or other neuropathic pain syndromes.29
Because of concerns about tolerance, abuse, and addiction, the use of opioids for nonmalignant pain was formerly considered controversial. In recent years, however, much research has supported the use of these agents. Opioids are now commonly and effectively used for treatment of neuropathic pain.7,22,27,30,31
A double-blind, dose-response study reported in 2003 used levorphanol tartrate (3 mg equivalent to 45 mg to 90 mg of oral morphine sulfate or 30 mg to 45 mg of oral oxycodone) and showed a 48% overall reduction in pain and moderate or better pain relief in 66% of patients.30 The researchers noted that higher doses are more effective in reducing the intensity of chronic neuropathic pain. They also demonstrated that tolerance was not a clinically significant problem as only four patients in the high-strength group ever reached the maximal allowed dose. Further, they noted no addictive behavior.30
Raja et al27 studied pain intensity, pain relief, cognitive and physical functioning, sleep, mood, side effects, and treatment preference in a group of patients with PHN. They compared responses to TCA therapy with those to opioids, noting that they both act via independent mechanisms and varied individual effect. The study found that patients completing all three treatments (including placebo) preferred opioids to TCAs and concluded that opioids effectively treat patients with PHN without impairment of cognition.
| NMDA-Receptor Antagonists |
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NMDA receptors have been studied for their role in opioid tolerance. Adjuvant use of ketamine may reduce morphine requirements and cause improvement in analgesia, as noted in case reports by Bell.33 A larger study showed that ketamine improves morphine analgesia in difficult pain syndromes (neuropathic pain caused by cancer); however, adverse effects on the central nervous system such as psychomimetic effects were noted.34 The authors state that future studies must address treatments to prevent or reduce the central effects of ketamine.
| Combined Analgesic Therapy |
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Gilron et al35 used a four-period crossover trial to assess the efficacy of morphine and gabapentin alone, these drugs in combination, and active placebo (in the form of low-dose lorazepam). They concluded that the trial unequivocally showed that gabapentin significantly enhanced the efficacy of morphine and suggested that further studies of combination drug trials are warranted.
Osteopathic physicians are trained to treat the whole person, and, with this goal in mind, it must be remembered that side effects of medications may pose limitations to their use. Skillful and judicious use of adjuvants, here defined as any agent that enables the use of a primary medication to its full dose potential, is mandated. An obvious example of this practice is the customary use of laxatives in combination with opioids.
| Other Treatment Modalities |
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As previously noted, drug treatment of patients with neuropathic pain lacks a standardized rationale and relies on clinical empiricism. Despite best efforts at treatment trials, some patients may continue to suffer. In these cases, referral to pain specialists is essential. Surgical interventions such as motor cortex stimulation,36 transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) units, and other peripheral stimulation37 have been shown to be helpful in these refractory cases.
| Prophylaxis |
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A large prospective, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind study was recently completed by the Shingles Prevention Study Group.38 The study included 38,546 adults aged 60 years or older and used a highly potent zoster vaccine (several times the concentration of that used for primary vaccination against chickenpox in children). Vaccine recipients showed reduced burden of illness (incidence and severity) by greater than half (61.1%; P<.001). The incidence of herpes zoster was reduced by 51.3%, and, most significantly, incidence of PHN was reduced by 66.5% (P<.001). The authors suggest that the decreased morbidity due to PHN more than adequately offsets the cost of large-scale immunization of individuals aged 60 years or older.38 The vaccine awaits FDA approval, and it remains to be seen whether the FDA will require further confirmatory trials for this promising vaccine.
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| Footnotes |
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This continuing medical education publication supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Purdue Pharma LP
| References |
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