Sensory Signs in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome and Peripheral Nerve Injury
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
This study determined patterns of sensory signs in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type I and II and peripheral nerve injury (PNI). Patients with upper-limb CRPS-I (n=298), CRPS-II (n=46), and PNI (n=72) were examined with quantitative sensory testing according to the protocol of the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain. The majority of patients (66%-69%) exhibited a combination of sensory loss and gain. Patients with CRPS-I had more sensory gain (heat and pressure pain) and less sensory loss than patients with PNI (thermal and mechanical detection, hypoalgesia to heat or pinprick). CRPS-II patients shared features of CRPS-I and PNI. CRPS-I and CRPS-II had almost identical somatosensory profiles, with the exception of a stronger loss of mechanical detection in CRPS-II. In CRPS-I and -II, cold hyperalgesia/allodynia (28%-31%) and dynamic mechanical allodynia (24%-28%) were less frequent than heat or pressure hyperalgesia (36%-44%, 67%-73%), and mechanical hypoesthesia (31%-55%) was more frequent than thermal hypoesthesia (30%-44%). About 82% of PNI patients had at least one type of sensory gain. QST demonstrates more sensory loss in CRPS-I than hitherto considered, suggesting either minimal nerve injury or central inhibition. Sensory profiles suggest that CRPS-I and CRPS-II may represent one disease continuum. However, in contrast to recent suggestions, small fiber deficits were less frequent than large fiber deficits. Sensory gain is highly prevalent in PNI, indicating a better similarity of animal models to human patients than previously thought. These sensory profiles should help prioritize approaches for translation between animal and human research.
[Cognitive behavioral therapy for complex regional pain syndrome].
Bernardy K, Wicking M, Michelka R, Schwarzer A Schmerz. 2025; 39(1):67-77.
PMID: 39812711 DOI: 10.1007/s00482-024-00858-2.
Schmidt H, Drusko A, Renz M, Schlomp L, Tost H, Schuh-Hofer S Pain. 2024; 166(1):196-211.
PMID: 39190340 PMC: 11647825. DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003355.
Contact-Heat Evoked Potentials: Insights into Pain Processing in CRPS Type I.
Allmendinger F, Scheuren P, De Schoenmacker I, Brunner F, Rosner J, Curt A J Pain Res. 2024; 17:989-1003.
PMID: 38505501 PMC: 10949273. DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S436645.
Ferland S, Wang F, De Koninck Y, Ferrini F Pain. 2024; 165(6):1304-1316.
PMID: 38277178 PMC: 11090034. DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003132.
Boada M, Gutierrez S, Eisenach J Mol Pain. 2024; 20:17448069241226553.
PMID: 38172079 PMC: 10846038. DOI: 10.1177/17448069241226553.