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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Neuropathic pain and prolonged regional inflammation as two distinct symptomatological components in complex regional pain syndrome with patchy osteoporosis--a pilot study.
- K Moriwaki, O Yuge, H Tanaka, H Sasaki, H Izumi, and K Kaneko.
- Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, School of Medicine, Hiroshima University, Japan. moriwak@ipc.hiroshima-u.ac.jp
- Pain. 1997 Aug 1; 72 (1-2): 277-82.
AbstractTo reappraise symptomatology of complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), we investigated the clinical symptoms of seven patients with CRPS who showed associated patchy osteoporosis. The incidence of moderate to severe spontaneous pain, burning pain, mechanical allodynia was higher in patients with significant nerve injury than in those without. Periarticular tenderness adjacent to osteoporotic bones, abnormalities of blood flow, edema and impairment of motor function were seen in both groups of patients. Our clinical observations of patients with CRPS associated with patchy osteoporosis suggest that CRPS may have the following two distinct components: (1) neuropathic pain that includes severe spontaneous pain or severe persistent mechanical allodynia and (2) prolonged regional inflammation, the early phase of which could be indicated by positive inflammatory symptoms of pain (tenderness), heat, redness, swelling and loss of function and their alleviation with corticosteroids.
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