Spreading of complex regional pain syndrome: not a random process
Open Access
- 18 February 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Neural Transmission
- Vol. 118 (9), 1301-1309
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00702-011-0601-1
Abstract
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) generally remains restricted to one limb but occasionally may spread to other limbs. Knowledge of the spreading pattern of CRPS may lead to hypotheses about underlying mechanisms but to date little is known about this process. The objective is to study patterns of spread of CRPS from a first to a second limb and the factors associated with this process. One hundred and eighty-five CRPS patients were retrospectively evaluated. Cox’s proportional hazards model was used to evaluate factors that influenced spread of CRPS symptoms. Eighty-nine patients exhibited CRPS in multiple limbs. In 72 patients spread from a first to a second limb occurred showing a contralateral pattern in 49%, ipsilateral pattern in 30% and diagonal pattern in 14%. A trauma preceded the onset in the second limb in 37, 44 and 91%, respectively. The hazard of spread of CRPS increased with the number of limbs affected. Compared to patients with CRPS in one limb, patients with CRPS in multiple limbs were on average 7 years younger and more often had movement disorders. In patients with CRPS in multiple limbs, spontaneous spread of symptoms generally follows a contralateral or ipsilateral pattern whereas diagonal spread is rare and generally preceded by a new trauma. Spread is associated with a younger age at onset and a more severely affected phenotype. We argue that processes in the spinal cord as well as supraspinal changes are responsible for spontaneous spread in CRPS.This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Space-based, but not arm-based, shift in tactile processing in complex regional pain syndrome and its relationship to cooling of the affected limbBrain, 2009
- Contralateral hyperalgesia and allodynia following intradermal capsaicin injection in manRheumatology, 2008
- Needlestick Distal Nerve Injury in Rats Models Symptoms of Complex Regional Pain SyndromeAnesthesia & Analgesia, 2007
- Onset and progression of dystonia in Complex Regional Pain SyndromePain, 2007
- Regulation of CNS synapses by neuronal MHC class IProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Tutorial in biostatistics: competing risks and multi‐state modelsStatistics in Medicine, 2006
- Chronic post-ischemia pain (CPIP): a novel animal model of complex regional pain syndrome-Type I (CRPS-I; reflex sympathetic dystrophy) produced by prolonged hindpaw ischemia and reperfusion in the ratPain, 2004
- Mechanisms of epilepsy progression: current theories and perspectives from neuroplasticity in adulthood and developmentEpilepsy Research, 2004
- Referred sensations in patients with complex regional pain syndrome type 1Rheumatology, 2003
- Neuronal Plasticity: Increasing the Gain in PainScience, 2000