• Minerva medica · Jun 2014

    Review

    [Localized neuropathic pain--5% lidocaine medicated patch as a first-line treatment and as add-on therapy: literature review and personal experience].

    • R Casale, E Polati, V Schweiger, F Coluzzi, A Bhaskar, and M Consalvo.
    • Servizio Neurofisiopatologia Unità di Diagnosi e Riabilitazione del Dolore Istituto Scientifico di Montescano IRCCS Fondazione "S. Maugeri" 27040 ‑ Montescano (PV) - roberto.casale@fsm.it.
    • Minerva Med. 2014 Jun 1;105(3):177-95.

    AbstractLocalized neuropathic pain (LNP) is a type of neuropathic pain characterized by consistent and circumscribed area(s) of maximum pain, which are associated with negative or positive sensory signs and/or spontaneous symptoms typical of neuropathic pain. This description outlines the clinical features of a group of pathologies, in which a LNP can be diagnosed and for whom topical targeted treatment with 5% Lidocaine medicated plaster can be suggested. Indeed both American as well as European guidelines already suggest 5% Lidocaine medicated plaster as a first line treatment in post herpetic neuralgia and in general in the treatment of conditions such as diabetic painful polyneuropathy and post surgical pain where a LNP can be ascertain. In a daily practice of a Pain Unit however the usual case mix encompasses also other causes of LNP, most of them with a scanty pain control in spite of a ongoing polytherapy. Aims of this paper were to focus on 5% Lidocaine medicated plaster as a first line treatment in LNP and to add new insight on its possible use as add-on therapy reporting our data on a consecutive series of 42 patients affected by LNP under unsatisfactory polytherapy in which 5% Lidocaine medicated plaster was able to achieve a satisfactory pain control.

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