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Review
The Role of Interventional Pain Management Strategies for Neuropathic Pelvic Pain in Endometriosis.
- Helen Gharaei and Negin Gholampoor.
- Azargan Pain Clinic, Tehran, Iran.
- Pain Physician. 2023 Sep 1; 26 (5): E487E495E487-E495.
BackgroundEndometriosis is a chronic common condition affecting 10% of reproductive-aged women globally. It is caused by the growth of endometrial-like tissue outside the uterine cavity and leads to chronic pelvic pain, affecting various aspects of a woman's physical, mental, emotional, and social well-being. This highlights the importance of an understanding of the potential involvement of the nervous system and involved nerves as well as an effective multidisciplinary pain management.ObjectivesOur aim was to assess the current understanding of pain mechanisms in endometriosis and the effectiveness of different interventional pain management strategies.Study DesignLiterature review.MethodsA search was conducted using multiple databases, including Google Scholar, MEDLINE (Ovid), PubMed, and Embase. We used keywords such as "endometriosis," "pain," pelvic pain, "management," and "anaesthesia" along with Boolean operators and MeSH terms. The search was limited to English language articles published in the last 15 years.ResultsNerve involvement is a well-established mechanism for pain generation in patients with endometriosis, through direct invasion, irritation, neuroangiogenesis, peripheral and central sensitization, and scar tissue formation. Endometriosis may also affect nerve fibers in the pelvic region, causing chronic pelvic pain, including sciatic neuropathy and compression of other pelvic nerves. Endometriosis can cause sciatica, often misdiagnosed due to atypical symptoms. Interventional pain management techniques such as superior hypogastric plexus block, impar ganglion block, S3 pulsed radiofrequency, myofascial pain trigger point release, peripheral nerve hydrodissection, and neuromodulation have been used to manage persistent and intractable pain with positive patient outcomes and improved quality of life.LimitationsThe complex and diverse clinical presentations of endometriosis make it challenging to compare the effectiveness of different pain management techniques.ConclusionEndometriosis is a complex condition causing various forms of pain including nerve involvement, scar tissue formation, and bowel/bladder symptoms. Interventional pain management techniques are effective for managing endometriosis-related pain.Key WordsEndometriosis, chronic pain, therapeutic interventions, interventional techniques, pain injections, visceral pain, peripheral pain.
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