• Pain · Jul 2006

    Case Reports

    Patients with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and CRPS: a possible association?

    • Joan M Stoler and Anne Louise Oaklander.
    • Genetics and Teratology Unit, Department of Pediatrics, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. jstoler@partners.org
    • Pain. 2006 Jul 1;123(1-2):204-9.

    AbstractRare patients are left with chronic pain, vasodysregulation, and other symptoms that define complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), after limb traumas. The predisposing factors are unknown. Genetic factors undoubtedly contribute, but have not yet been identified. We report four CRPS patients also diagnosed with the classical or hypermobility forms of Ehlers Danlos syndrome (EDS), inherited disorders of connective tissue. These patients had been diagnosed using standard diagnostic criteria for CRPS and for EDS. All had sustained joint injury; in three this had been surgically treated. The association of these two diagnoses leads us to hypothesize that EDS might contribute to the development of CRPS in one or more of the following ways: via stretch injury to nerves traversing hypermobile joints, increased fragility of nerve connective tissue, or nerve trauma from more frequent surgery. We review the clinical presentation of the different Ehlers Danlos syndromes and provide clinical criteria that can be used to screen CRPS patients for EDS for clinical or research purposes.

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