• Pain Pract · Jun 2024

    Observational Study

    Phenotypical characterization of exteroceptive sensation and pain symptoms on diabetic patients.

    • Inaeh de Paula Oliveira, Victória Regina da Silva Oliveira, Heloísa Alonso-Matielo, Beatriz Magalhães Eng, de AndradeDaniel CiampiDC0000-0003-3411-632XDepartment of Health Science and Technology, Faculty of Medicine, Aalborg University, Aalborg, Denmark., Manoel Jacobsen Teixeira, Milena Cristina Dias Calsaverini, de Quadros RibeiroFernandoFUniversitary Hospital, University of São Paulo Hospital, São Paulo, Brazil., José Deney Alves Araújo, Helder Takashi Imoto Nakaya, José Pinhata Otoch, and Camila Squarzoni Dale.
    • Department of Anatomy, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
    • Pain Pract. 2024 Jun 1; 24 (5): 724738724-738.

    BackgroudDiabetic neuropathy (DN) is one of the most common complications of diabetes, affecting about half of individuals with the disease. Among the various symptoms of DN, the development of chronic pain stands out and manifests as exacerbated responses to sensorial stimuli. The conventional clinical treatments used for general neuropathy and associated painful symptoms, still brings uncomplete and unsatisfactory pain relief. Patients with neuropathic pain syndromes are heterogeneous. They present with a variety of sensory symptoms and pain qualities which difficult the correct diagnosis of sensory comorbidities and consequently, the appropriate chronic pain management.AimsHerein, we aimed to demonstrate the existence of different sensory profiles on diabetic patients by investigating epidemiological and clinical data on the symptomatology of a group of patients with DN.MethodsThis is a longitudinal and observational study, with a sample of 57 volunteers diagnosed with diabetes from outpatient day clinic of Hospital Universitário of the University of São Paulo-Brazil. After being invited and signed the Informed Consent Form (ICF), patients were submitted to clinical evaluation and filled out pain and quality of life questionnaires. They also performed quantitative sensory test (QST) and underwent skin biopsy for correlation with cutaneous neuropathology.ResultsData demonstrate that 70% of the studied sample presented some type of pain, manifesting in a neuropathic or nociceptive way, what has a negative impact on the life of patients with DM. We also demonstrated a positive association between pain and anxiety and depression, in addition to pain catastrophic thoughts. Three distinct profiles were identified in the sample, separated according to the symptoms of pain: (i) subjects without pain; (ii) with mild or moderate pain; (iii) subjects with severe pain. We also identified through skin biopsy that diabetic patients presented advanced sensory impairment, as a consequence of the degeneration of the myelinated and unmyelinated peripheral fibers. This study characterized the painful symptoms and exteroceptive sensation profile in these diabetic patients, associated to a considerable level of sensory degeneration, indicating, and reinforcing the importance of the long-term clinical monitoring of individuals diagnosed with DM, regarding their symptom profiles and exteroceptive sensitivity.© 2024 World Institute of Pain.

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