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Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1

Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1. Anke GJ De Bruijn. Perception. Pain. Cerebral cortex. Limbic system. Emotion. Higher centers. Modulation. Spinal cord. Transduction. Transmission. Stimulus. Mediators. Receptor. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. Definition 72 different names:

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Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1

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  1. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1 Anke GJ De Bruijn

  2. Perception Pain Cerebral cortex Limbic system Emotion Higher centers Modulation Spinal cord Transduction Transmission Stimulus Mediators Receptor

  3. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome • Definition • 72 different names: • Sudeck’s atrophy • Posttraumatic dystrophy • Sympathetic reflex dystrophy • Shoulder-hand syndrome • Veldman criteria, IASP criteria, Bruehl criteria Veldman et al. 1993; Beek et al. 2002; Reinders et al. 2002

  4. IASP Conference Orlando 1993 • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome • Spontaneous, continuing pain or allodynia/hyperalgesia, disproportionate to inciting event • Evidence at some time of edema, changes in skin blood flow, or abnormal sudomotor activity • Exclusion of medical conditions that would otherwise account for the degree of pain and dysfunction • Type 1 without, type 2 with nerve injury Stanton Hicks et al. 1995

  5. Bruehl criteria • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome • Continuing pain disproportionate to inciting event • Sensory (allodynia, hypesthesia) • Vasomotor (skin color changes, temperature) • Sudomotor (edema/swelling, sweating) • Motor/trophic signs and symptoms (weakness, dystonia, nail/hair growth) • At least one symptom in each category • At least one sign in two or more categories Bruehl et al. 1999

  6. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome • Epidemiology • 1-2% following fracture • 7-35% following Colles’ fracture • 10-26% spontaneous • Other causes: MI, CVA, reperfusion syndrome • 8000 estimated new patients per year in NL • Female : Male ≈ 3:1 Veldman et al. 1993

  7. Pathophysiology CRPS Higher centers Neuropeptides CNS Dorsal horn Neurogenic inflammation Substance P CGRP Blood vessel Nerve injury to C and Aδ fibres

  8. Neuropeptides • Animal model • Loose ligation of sciatic nerve in the rat • Changing expression neuropeptides • CRPS symptoms appear • Increase skin blood flow is blocked by Capsaicin • NK1 receptor antagonist decreases CRPS symptoms Verge et al. 2002; Daemen et al. 1998; Kingerly et al. 2003

  9. Neuropeptides • Patient model • Infusion of Substance P • aggravates CRPS • Depletion of Substance P with • Capsaicin decreases CRPS • Symptoms • Bradykinin, Neuropeptide Y, • CGRP and VIP increased • Transcutaneous electric stimulation • increases neuropeptides release Blair et al. 1998; Weber et al. 2001; Cheslie et al. 1990; Rumsfield et al. 1991

  10. Pathophysiology CRPS Higher centers Pro-inflammatory agents CNS Mastcells IL6 TNFalfa Dorsal horn Pro-inflammatory agents Neurogenic inflammation Blood vessel

  11. Inflammatory response • Animal Model • Loose ligation of sciatic nerve in the rat • Increase in cytokines: especially IL-6 and TNFalfa Wagner et al. 1996; Sommer et al. 1997; Shubayev et al. 2001; Cui et al. 2000

  12. Inflammatory response • Patient model • IL-6 and TNFalfa are significantly higher in a CRPS extremity • Tryptase is significantly higher in CRPS • Succesful treatment with anti-TNF Huygen et al. 2002; Huygen et al. submitted 2003; Huygen et al. 2003

  13. Free radicals • Animal model • Infusion of tert-butylhydroperoxide in rat paws induces: • Increased skin temperature • Increased volume • Skin redness • Impaired function • Pain Van der Laan et al. 1998

  14. Free radicals • Patient model • CRPS resembles “local” sepsis, free radicals are possibly involved in sepsis • DMSO 50% relieves clinical symptoms in the warm phase • N-acetylcysteine relieves clinical symptoms in the cold phase Goris et al. 1987; Zuurmond et al. 1996; Perez et al. 2003

  15. Pathophysiology CRPS Higher centers Sensitization 1 Sensory dysfunction CNS Sensitization GABA 2 Sympathetic disorder 3 Motor dysfunction Dorsal horn Neuropeptides Cytokines Blood vessel

  16. Sensory dysfunction • Animal model • Loose ligation of sciatic nerve in the rat • Changes in the dorsal horn under influence of neuropeptides and cytokines Verge et al. 2002; Sorkin et al. 2002

  17. Sensory dysfunction • Patient model • > 70% glove or stocking like pattern • Allodynia and/or hyperalgesia • Central mechanisms Veldman et al. 1993; Boas et al. 1996; Thimineur et al. 1998; Rommel et al. 1999,2001

  18. Sympathetic dysfunction • Animal model • Loose ligation of sciatic nerve in the rat • CRPS symptoms • Sympathetic dysfunction is caused by denervation induced hypersensitivity of catecholamines Kurvers et al. 1998

  19. Sympathetic dysfunction • Patient model • Density of alpha receptors in the skin of CRPS patients is greater than in control subjects • Decreased sympathetic activity in acute phase induces hypersensitivity to catecholamines Drummond et al. 1996; Birklein et al. 2001

  20. Motor dysfunction • Patient model • Dystonia, weakness, myoclonus and tremor • Changes in CNS by abnormal input can result in a neglect like syndrome • Clinical picture of disuse is diffucult to discern from CRPS 1 • Changes in sensory and motor integration in spinal cord, involvement of GABA system Swartzman et al. 1990; Galer et al. 1995; Butler et al. 1996; Hilten et al. 2000

  21. Immunologic considerations • Patient model • Genetic abnormality (HLA-DR2) on chromosome 6 is more often found in chronic CRPS • HLA-DQ1 is significantly increased in CRPS • Association HLA-DR13 in CRPS • Significant association TNF2 allele in warm CRPS and even homozygote in CRPS patients with  2 extremities affected • Seropositivity Parvovirus B12 is associated with CRPS Mailis et al. 1994; Kemler et al. 2000; Hilten et al. 2000; Vaneker et al. 2002; van de Vusse et al. 2001

  22. Drug-induced CRPS • Case reports • Phenobarbital • Improvement on withdrawal or treatment with Gabapentin • Described since 1966 • Isoniazide • Cyclosporin A in renal transplant patients • Heroin induced rhabdomyolysis • Cocain injected intra-arterially Van der Korst et al. 1966; Rovetta et al. 2001; Lee et al. 2001; Gay et al. 2000; Marshall et al. 2000

  23. Psychological factors • Patient model • No evidence that these factors play an aetiological role • Psychological and/or emotional factors are able to intensify pain in CRPS • Prospective studies for psychological and psychiatric factors in CRPS Bruehl et al. 2002; Bruehl et al. 1992; Beerthuizen et al. 2003

  24. Pathophysiology CRPS Higher centers Sensory dysfunction Mastcells CNS Sympathetic disorder GABA Motor dysfunction IL6 TNFalfa Dorsal horn Pro-inflammatory agents Neurogenic inflammation Substance P CGRP Blood vessel Nerve injury

  25. Therapy CRPS • Limited effect sympathetic blocks, radical scavengers (mannitol, DMSO, acetylcysteine), vasodilators, prednisone, acupuncture and lymphe drainage • Analgetics: antidepressants, carbamazepine • Limited effect vitamin C in prevention • Proven effect calcium regulators (Bisphosphonates) • Calcitonine relieves pain effectively • Capsaicin Forouzanfar et al. 2002; Perez et al. 2001

  26. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome type 1 • Future • Diagnosis, gold standard, epidemiology • Pathophysiology: • Pathway analysis, genetics, adverse drug reactions • Interventions, antagonists, synthesis inhibitors

  27. Trend Project(Trauma Related Neuronal Dysfunction) • Knowledge consortium with multi-disciplinary approach: • Epidemiology • Assessment technologies • Pharmacotherapeutics • Proteomics • Genetics

  28. PhD project Epidemiology • Incidence and prevalence • Disease course • Applied treatments and effectiveness • Intrinsic and extrinsic factors that precipitate and sustain CRPS • Phenotype spectrum

  29. IPCI Database • Integrated Primary Care Information Database • Longitudinal observational database • Electronic patient records of 150 GP’s: 500.000 patients in the Netherlands • Coded and anonymous data on demographics, symptoms, diagnosis (from GP and specialist), physical examination, discharge letters, referrals and prescriptions

  30. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome type 1 • Future • Diagnosis, gold standard, epidemiology • Pathophysiology: • Pathway analysis, genetics, adverse drug reactions • Interventions, antagonists, synthesis inhibitors • Trend and Infobiomed join forces? • Integration patient data and molecular data?

  31. END

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