Complex regional pain syndrome(CRPS)

Introduction

  • Abnormal post traumatic pain following any nerve injury
  • 3 basic criteria for diagnosis (American Association for Hand Surgery)
  • Disproportionate pain
  • hyperpathia-prolonged pain after stimulation
  • allodynia-marked pain from a usually nonpainful simulation
  • pain is usually constant.
  • Interference with function
  • Autonomic-type abnormality (eg, skin discoloration, sweating, dryness, edema, temperature change, osteoporosis)
  • CRPS (International Pain Nomenclature Group task force 1996) - defined on purely clinical grounds
  • CRPS is a clinical diagnosis – there are no physiological markers
  • CRPS is initiated by trauma, compounded by post traumatic event(tight cast) , and exacerbated by pre-morbid physiological state
  • Early recognition and prompt treatment is the single most important predictor of recovery
  • 80% pts with RSD diagnosed within 1 yr of injury show significant improvement
  • 50 % pts diagnosed after 1 yr have significant impairment

Classification

  • 2 major categories and three types
  1. Sympathetically maintained pain syndrome (SMP)
  • pain that is maintained by sympathetic efferent innervation and or circulating catecholamines
  • responds to sympathetic blocks
  • seen in Types I and II
  1. Sympathetically independent pain syndrome (SIP)
  • Does not respond to sympathetic block
  • Seen in Type III
  • Clinically patients may have varying components of SMP and SIP throughout the course of the disease

Type I (classically “reflex sympathetic dystrophy”) follows an initiating noxious event

  • Pain - Continuous pain or allodynia and hyperpathia is not limited to the territory of a single peripheral nerve and is disproportionate to the inciting event
  • Functional Impairment
  • Autonomic dysfunction - Edema, skin blood flow abnormality, abnormal sudomotor activity, and motor dysfunction are disproportionate to the inciting event
  • Exclusion - Diagnosis is excluded by the existence of conditions that would otherwise account for the degree of pain and dysfunction

Type II (classically described “major causalgia”) includes the following

  • Nerve injury - Major nerve injury, more regionally confined presentation (usually), principally involving the territory of the involved nerve
  • Pain - Spontaneous pain or allodynia and hyperpathia usually limited to the area involved but may spread distally or proximally
  • Functional impairment
  • Autonomic dysfunction -Edema, blood flow abnormality, or abnormal sudomotor activity is or has been shown in the region of pain subsequent to the inciting event, or there is motor dysfunction disproportionate to the inciting event
  • Exclusion -Diagnosis is excluded by conditions that otherwise account for the degree of pain and dysfunction

Type III (sympathetically independent pain)

  • classification identifies cases of disproportionate pain and sensory change with motor and tissue change that do not respond to sympathetic block.

Pathophysiology

  • Normally pain is felt in the presence of actual or impending cellular injury , in the absence of trauma persistent pain is pathological
  • Proinflammatory cells like lymphocytes and mast cells accumulate in the affected tissue, releasing cytokines and histamine, and activate inflammatory mediators, such as prostaglandins, which are responsible for sensitizing C nociceptor afferent nerve endings
  • This information is transmitted to the dorsal root ganglia where sensitization of a wide dynamic range of neurons (WDR) contributes to the central nociceptive discharge.
  • Within the dorsal horn, NMDA receptor transmitter interactions produce long lasting potentials , is refractory to stimulation and is theorized to play a role in CRPS I and II
  • The perception of pain is determined by complex interaction of afferent, descending modulatory pathways and peripheral and central factors
  • Vasomotor disturbances can result from a variety of mechanisms including antidromic vaso dilation, vasoparalytic dilatation, normal somatosensory reflexes and denervation supersensitivity
  • Abnormalities:
  1. abnormal neurotransmitter release secondary to nociceptive foci
  2. abnormal receptor distribution
  3. alterations in receptor sensitivity (up-or-down regulation)
  • Following trauma a transient period of dystrophic extremity function is normal
  • It is abnormal for hyperpathia, allodynia, vasomotor disturbances and functional deficiencies to persist
  • Theories

1. Exaggerated and sustained normal inflammatory response

2. Backflow of nociceptive stimuli into the injured area releasing vasoactive neuropeptide substances ie substance P, calcitonin gene-related peptide, bradykinin, serotonin, somatostatin, neurokinin A, and others

  1. Substance P especially has been shown to cause vasodilatation, increased vascular permeability, pavementing of leukocytes in venules, stimulation of phagocytosis, degranulation of mast cells, and stimulation of fibroblasts.

3. Altered response by sympathetic nervous system

  1. this concept being increasing challenged
  2. Experimental findings do not show hyperactivity of the sympathetic nervous system
  3. placebo-controlled studies showed sympathetic block to be no more effective than the placebo
  4. autonomic dysfunction now thought to either be sensitisation of sympathetic nervous system by local neuropeptides or mediated by neuropeptides themselves

4. Psychological

  1. CPRS patients are more likely to be anxious, depressed, more dissatisfied with their bodies
  2. most investigators believe these psychologic differences are a result rather than a cause of RSD

Demographics

  • most reports average about a 5% incidence after an inciting cause
  • The more common injuries and surgery, such as Colles fracture and carpal tunnel syndrome, have the highest frequency of cause
  • 10% to 30% of patients have spontaneous occurrence with no evident precipitating cause or condition
  • F>M 3:1
  • mean age 45 (35-50); has been reported in children
  • increased incidence of cigarette smoking
  • Psychological factors such as stressful life event, and inadequate coping mechanisms influence the development and severity
  • No specific personality or psychological factor has been predisposed individual to CRPS

Prognosis

  • Most patients with Type 2 will improve with time
  • in other forms of RSD-CRPS, complete remission is rare
  • incidence of recurrent or migratory RSD is reported to be as high as 15% to 75%, often occurring at a different site
  • Overall, review of the literature gives the impression that most treatment methods result in approximately one third of patients with excellent to good relief, one third with some improvement, and one third with no improvement or worsening of symptoms.

Aetiology

  • Most common are
  1. Colles fracture –11-37%
  2. Carpal tunnel surgery 2-5%
  3. Surgical trauma to superficial radial nerve and palmer branch of radial nerve
  4. No cause in 30%

Clinical

Symptoms

  • most characteristic clinical feature of RSD is the peculiar disproportionate unremitting pain.
  • hyperpathia and allodynia
  • pain is constant and not completely relieved by rest, and it is aggravated by motion; activity; or temperature change (especially cold).
  • Mirror image (advancement to the contralateral extremity) up to 25%

Signs

  • first noticeable physical findings in RSD is the patient's avoidance of touch or functional use caused by pain
  • Trophic changes
  1. Stiffness(70%) - passive better than active range of motion until late changes occur
  2. Oedema– gives a glossy smooth appearance to skin
  3. Atrophy of hair and nails(or hyperkeratosis)
  4. Atrophy of intrinsics may be seen
  5. Osteopenia involving cortical and cancellous bone
  6. Autonomic changes
  7. vasomotor changes include skin discolouration (mottled color change (redness or cyanosis))
  8. difference in skin temperature - warmness more common early and coolness later in the course of the disorder
  9. hyperhydrosis or dryness
  10. Motor disturbances
  11. Tremor (58%)
  12. weakness
  13. incoordination dystonia (35%)
  14. decreased ROM
  • need to examine the cervical spine and neurological system to exclude other causes eg diabetes, small fibre peripheral neuropathies, entrapment neuropathies, thoracic outlet syndrome, DVT and cellulitis may all mimic CRPS, and assess shoulder as frozen shoulder can occur secondarily
  • look for myofascial trigger points – 50-70% incidence in CPRS patients
  • 3 distinct clinical forms

1. CRPS Type 2

  • caused by partial injury to a proximal major mixed nerve
  • onset is immediate and its course usually includes some degree of spontaneous improvement
  • superior response to sympathetic block and sympathectomy
  • Nerve injuries are usually above the elbow and knee, and are most often caused by high-velocity missile wounds
  • Sympathetic block usually provides temporary relief of causalgia and repeated blocks may produce sustained relief in some cases
  • When only temporary relief consistently results, surgery is indicated, with sympathectomy remaining the treatment of choice

2. Shoulder-hand syndrome

  • pain of RSD originating in the shoulder, progressing distally
  • need to exclude Pancoast's tumor and visceral tumors

3. Sudeck's osteoporosis/atrophy

  • resembles the osteoporosis of disuse but onset of osteoporosis is much more rapid than can be explained by simple disuse, with findings as early as 4 to 6 weeks after onset of symptoms
  • consider calcitonin or bisphosphonate therapy, which may reverse the osteoblastic activity and the pain in Sudeck's osteoporosis

Stages of CRPS

  • Patients have enormous variation in their presenting symptoms, duration, and mixture of characteristics in each stage.
  • Many never progress beyond stage I, whereas others may rapidly progress to the dystrophic stage III within 3 to 6 months.
  • These stages have no great clinical value, other than as a convenient description of the clinical change and its prognostic implications

Stage I: acute

  • Lasts approximately 3 months (variable)
  • Constant burning or throbbing pain (intensity varies), atrophy, and hyperpathia
  • Trigger points may develop
  • Variable vasomotor changes, such as edema (aiding or nonprinting); color change (usually redness, sometimes cyanosis); temperature change (usually warming, sometimes coolness); increased sweating; sometimes dryness
  • Decreased joint range of motion caused by pain
  • Sometimes swollen fingernail ridging (occasional)
  • Increased hair growth or pigmentation (occasional)

Stage II: subacute

  • Lasts approximately 9 to 12 months (variable)
  • Constant aggravating pain (intensity varies)
  • Atrophy of skin and subcutaneous tissue
  • Loss of fingertip pads (pencil pointing)
  • Glossy, thin skin
  • Decreased hair growth
  • Cyanosis
  • Brawny edema
  • Joint ankylosis
  • Palmar fasciitis and Dupuytren's nodules (occasional)
  • Myofascial trigger points (usual)
  • Subchondral patchy osteoporosis (usual)

Stage III: chronic

  • Chronic intractable pain
  • Pale, cool, dry extremity
  • Thin, stretched skin
  • Muscle atrophy
  • Fixed flexion or extension contractures
  • Diminished hair growth (usual)
  • Patchy to generalized osteoporosis
  • Patient is chronically depressed and may contemplate suicide

Diagnostic testing

  • No one laboratory study is specific for RSD-CRPS, and it remains a clinical diagnosis
  • objective measurements are useful to support the diagnosis
  • typical patients with RSD have normal sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein level, leukocyte count, and concentrations of other acute-phase reactants, despite the appearance of inflammation

Electromyographic and nerve conduction studies

  • show no specific abnormality associated with RSD

Pain threshold evaluation

  • Quantitiative sensory tests are available to test and compare the respond to painful stimuli
  • Using monofilaments to assess hyperpathia and allodynia
  • Useful to monitor progress
  • use of a visual analog scale and a pain diagram drawn by the patient will add to functional assessment

Thermography

  • Temperature measurement by infrared thermography
  • most useful to help the clinician communicate with the patient about the illness and to monitor progress.

Radiology

1. Xray

  • considerable demineralization must occur for osteopenia to become visible on standard radiographic view which places patients at a late stage and a worse prognosis
  • also see diffuse juxtacortical demineralization and subchondral erosion and cysts

2. three phase technetium bone scan

  • in the phase III scan - diffuse tracer uptake in the delayed image is diagnostic according to Mackinnon
  • abnormalities seen in 50-80%
  • A normal bone scan does not rule out the diagnosis
  • useful test when positive, because it is seen well before standard radiographic change
  • positive scan has high specificity but low sensitivity
  • bone scans is not a prerequisite for diagnosis, does not correlate with response to treatment or predict recovery

Evaluation of autonomic control

  • Autonomic function controls sweating and microvascular perfusion
  • Evaluation of sympathetic control or dysfunction aids in diagnosis
  • May be evaluated by testing microvascular flow or sweating
  • Microvascular examination
  1. Under normal circulation total digital flow is composed of 80 – 95 % thermoregulatory flow and 5-20 % nutritional flow
  2. In CRPS impaired autonomic control leads to ischaemia secondary to reduced nutritional flow secondary to altered AV shunting
  3. Analysed using microscopic epi-illumination of digital skin, combined with laser Doppler flux
  • Sudomotor evaluation
  1. Galvanic skin conduction
  2. Quantitative sweat response

Diagnostic sympathetic blocks

  • Traditionally used as a diagnostic test
  • IV infusion of phentolamine (alphaadrenergic blockade) or regional blocks stellate brachial plexus block
  • More recent evidence refutes this and shows it no more effective than placebo

Treatment

  • Multiteam approach with surgeon , therapist, pain specialist and psychologist
  • Early diagnosis is paramount- there is general belief that the earlier treatment is instituted, the better the prognosis
  • all techniques are directed at interruption of the reflex pain cycle

Surgical treatment

  1. Sympathectomy
  2. useful in well-selected patients, especially in cases with proximal nerve injury (causalgia)
  3. The patient most likely to benefit from sympathectomy is one who obtains repeated, dramatic, temporary relief from sympathetic blocks but for whom the relief never lasts longer than the duration of the anaesthetic and in whom there is no placebo effect with use of saline for the block.
  4. Surgery for neural dystrophic focus
  5. Principles
  6. need for urgent surgery to avoid a severe chronic pain syndrome
  7. Use long-acting or continuous axillary block anaesthetic to avoid redevelopment of a pain reflex cycle – shown to be effective
  8. Extensile exposure
  9. Avoid tension on nerve repair site – use grafts if required
  10. Prevent adhesion between skin and nerve – Z plasty, local flaps
  11. If wound bed scarred, modify the bed
  12. Minimise internal neurolysis
  13. Prevent hematoma
  14. Avoid constrictive postoperative dressing
  15. Postoperative pain control
  16. Post carpal tunnel
  17. Preserve palmar cutaneous branch
  18. Identify all branches
  19. Treat neuroma by relocation or repairing if in continuity
  20. If bed scarred, then modify local environment
  21. autologous vein wraps – neuroma of palmar cutaneous nerve or branches of median nerve in palm
  22. local flaps – PB, ADQ, PQ, lumbricals, hypothenar fat pad
  23. regional flaps – fasciocutaneous, fascial
  24. Superficial branch radial nerve
  25. Identify nerve proximal and distal to scar
  26. Options
  27. nerve repair with graf
  28. relocate into muscle/radius
  29. cephalic vein wrap
  30. Secondary joint deformities
  31. Contemplate after maximal nonoperative improvement has been obtained
  32. Minimum 3-6 months
  33. Indications are joint pain without diffuse dystrophic symptoms and arthrofibrosis interfering with function
  34. Implanted electrical stimulation
  35. improvement by peripheral nerve block is a prerequisite, along with temporary success by transcutaneous nerve stimulation
  36. best results when used in patients whose pain is “somatically” derived and not from “sympathetic overstimulation/RSD.”

Nonsurgical treatment

  1. Hand therapy
  2. foundation of treatment for most patients with RSD-CRPS
  3. other modalities should serve as adjunct
  4. imperative to establish baseline measurement criteria to monitor progress
  5. these patients typically do not believe they are slowly improving until shown proof through objective measurements, such as reduced edema, increased grip strength, improved range of motion, temperature control, and so forth.
  6. Techniques
  7. “Rest and motion” are management principles that emphasize the need for partial rest in a splinted functional position and frequent physical activity and motion to the fullest pain-free extent
  8. Heat to relax muscle spasm and improve joint motion
  9. Treat myofascial trigger points with warm massage, stretch exercises, and injection of persistent trigger points
  10. ultrasound over the stellate ganglion or the involved peripheral nerve
  11. biofeedback - temperature biofeedback – most useful when clinical manifestations include pronounced temperature change
  12. desensitization
  13. stress loading
  14. Stellate ganglion and other nerve blocks
  15. remains the most widely accepted form of RSD-CRPS treatment
  16. blocks are not uniformly successful and are no longer required for diagnosis, although widely used to classify sympathetically maintained pain (CRPS type I or II)
  17. best suited for patients whose manifestations seem predominantly sympathetic, such as abnormal skin color, temperature, and sweat
  18. usually injected with local anaesthetic
  19. results verified by
  20. Horner’s syndrome
  21. Increase in skin temperature, venous engorgement, dry skin, mottled color, laser Doppler flux changes
  22. Reflex pain firmly established at the central level is more likely to respond to other methods that activate the endogenous opioid internal pain control system, which is known to interfere with pain neurotransmitter production and secretion (eg, substance P). This endogenous mechanism might explain why “placebo blocks” are frequently successful in as many as 30% of patients
  23. Brachial plexus blocks are useful to determine whether a patient's stiffness is caused by pain or fibrosis by assessing the passive range of motion while they are anesthetized and paralyzed.
  24. Repeated local long-acting nerve blocks are sometimes successful in breaking the pain cycle in selected patients whose symptoms are confined to a specific neurologic region, (ie superficial radial nerve, or an isolated digit, such as an amputation stump with painful digital neuroma.)
  25. Intravenous regional infusions
  26. infusion of intravenous guanethidine sympathetic block into an extremity isolated by Bier block
  27. Other common agents are reserpine,phentolamine, steroids and bretylium but no conclusive evidence
  28. Recent randomized, double-blind controlled comparison of intravenous guanethidine, reserpine, and saline showed no difference at 24 hours. Similar studies using phentolamine showed no advantage over placebo. As yet, there has been no controlled study of bretylium tosylate
  29. Systemic intravenous infusion
  30. Lignocaine
  31. Shown to relieve neuropathic pain and/or pain refractory to opioid therapy
  32. antihyperalgesic effects on the peripheral as well as the central nervous system
  33. membrane stabilising effect
  34. Medical treatment
  1. sympatholytics
  2. clonidine (α2-adrenergic agonist), phenoxybenzamine (combined α1- and α2-antagonist)
  3. Calcium channel blockers
  4. Nifedipine, diltiazem (verapamil has predominantly cardiac effect and is not useful for RSD-CRPS)
  5. function to decrease sympathetic smooth muscle tone and improve blood flow, warming digits by preventing calcium release and reducing vasoconstriction.
  6. NSAIDS
  7. of questionable value
  8. Steroids
  9. Proven beneficial in some patient- either with a short-term, high-dose method or with long-term use
  10. Central acting agents
  11. anticonvulsants – postulated to stabilise excitable nerve membrane and reduce hyperexcitability (Clonazepam, gabapentin)
  12. baclofen (GABA agonist) – useful for ongoing muscle spasms and cramps
  13. recently intravenous infusion of Alendronate has been shown to reduce pain and swelling and increasing ROM iin pts with CRPS
  14. Antidepressants, anxiety, narcotic, and sleep medications
  15. antidepressants(TCA) – provide analgesia and modulate sympathetic over activity
  16. narcotics - One should exhaust other treatment techniques before resorting to chronic narcotic use.
  17. Calcitonin
  18. regulates bone metabolism
  19. better results are reported when patients are treated soon after onset
  20. best suited for patients with positive three-phase bone scan
  21. Biphosphonates
  22. by reducing local acceleration of bone remodelling - potent osteoclast blocking agents and their believed action to inhibit neuropeptide release from afferent nerve endings
  23. most suitable in patients with abnormalities on bone scan
  1. TENS
  2. mechanism is hypothesized to be by activation of the endogenous opioid analgesic system to release endorphins that may inhibit pain at the level of the spinothalamic tract
  3. particularly useful when there are minimal inflammatory or autonomic changes and pain is the predominant manifestation.
  4. generally used as adjunctive therapy to assist with pain control.
  5. most effective when initiated early.
  6. Acupuncture
  7. Using electrodes or transdermal needles
  8. Better results in Asian patients (?due to higher expectations)

Principles in the treatment of RSD