complex regional pain syndrome Flashcards

1
Q

complex regional pain syndrome

CRPS

A
  • chronic neuropathic pain that follows limb injury
  • pain lasts longer and is more severe than expected for the original tissue damage
  • diagnosis is clinical
  • AKA reflexive sympathetic dystrophy (RSD)
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2
Q

CRPS affects UE or LE?

A
  • both
  • more common in UE
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3
Q

CRPS associations

A

related to:
* crush injuries
* distal radius fracture
* tibial fracture
* traumatic peripheral nerve injuries
immobilization
higher incidence in smokers
higher incidence with pre-existing fibromyalgia
high percentage of patients had a concomitant stressful life event (around injury or trauma)

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4
Q

more recent CRPS classfications

A

warm CRPS
* warm, dry
* red
* edematous
* inflammatory
* shorter duration: 4-5 months
cold CRPS
* cold, blue
* sweaty
* less edematous
* not inflammatory
* 20 months

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5
Q

subtypes of CRPS

A

Type I
* without major nerve damage - pain syndrome triggered by a soft tissue or bone injury not associated with an identifiable nerve injury
* often a crush injury, particularly in lower limb
* following immobilization
* may also follow ampuation, myocardial infarction, stroke, or cancer
Type II
* with major nerve damage (pain syndrome similar to above, involving direct partial or complete injury to a peripheral nerve)

10% have no precipitating event

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6
Q

epidemiology of CRPS

CRPS

A
  • 5.46-26.2 per 100,000 persons/year
  • CRPS I > CRPS II
  • female > male (3x higher)
  • upper limb > lower limb (2x higher)
  • mean age 46-52 years
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7
Q

clinical features of CRPS

CRPS

A

pain: usually described as burning or stinging
sensory
* hyperesthesia: unsual increased or altered sensitivity to sensory stimuli (ramped up NS)
* hyperalgesia: increased sensitivity to pain (pin prick is very painful)
* allodynia: condition in which ordinarily nonpainful stimuli evokes pain (pressure or light touch is painful)
motor
* decreased ROM
* weakness
* fatigue
* tremor
* muscle spasms
* dystonia
trophic: nail growth altered, hair growth, glossy skin
sudomotor (autonomic): edema/swelling
vasomotor: skin color and temperature changes
psychological: anxiety, depression
limitations in activities and participation

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8
Q

CRPS diagnostic criteria - symptoms

A

continuous pain disproportionate to inciting event AND
symptoms in 3 of 4 categories
* sensory: hyperesthesia and/or allodynia
* vasomotor: temperature asymmetry and/or skin color changes and/or skin color asymmetry
* sudomotor/edema: edema and/or sweating and/or sweating asymmetry
* motor/trophic: decreased ROM and/or motor dysfunction (weakness, tremor, dystonia) and/or trophic changes (ahri, nail, skin)

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9
Q

CRPS diagnostic criteria - physical exam findings, signs

A

must display at least 1 sign at time of evaluation in 2 or more categories:
* sensory: evidence of hyperalgesia (to pinprick) and/or allodynia (to light tough and/or temperature sensation and/or somatic pressure and/or joint movement)
* vasomotor: evidence of temperature asymmetry (>1 degree C) and/or skin color cahnge and/or asymmetry
* sudomotor/edema: evidence of edema and/or sweating changes and/or sweating asymmetry
* motor/trophic: evidence of decreased ROM and/or motor dysfunction (weakness, tremor, dystonia) and/or trophic changes (hair, nail, skin)

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10
Q

CRPS diagnostic criteria

A

sensitivity: 0.99 (rule out if not present)
specificity: 0.68

patient symptom criteria met AND
provider examination criteria met AND
there is no other diagnosis that better explains signs and symptoms

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11
Q

pathophysiology of CRPS

A

somatosensory system
* changes that process thermal, tactile, and noxious stimuli

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12
Q

pathophysiology of CRPS

A
  • central sensitization: increased response to stimulus in CNS
  • peripheral sensitization: increased nociceptive firing
  • release of neuropeptides: substance P, calcitonin
  • altered sympathetic nervous system
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13
Q

acute CRPS

A

reduced SNS function
* vasodilation: warm/red extremity
inflammatory factors
* increased local, system, and CSF levels of proinflammatory factors
* decreased systemic anti-inflammatory factors

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14
Q

chronic CRPS

A

increased SNS function
* vasoconstriction - cold/bluish extremity
* super-sensitivity to catecholamins - may lead to exaggerated sweating and vasoconstriction
* vasoconstriction may contribute to trophic changes due to local tissue hypoxia

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15
Q

components of pathophysiology of CRPS

A

genetic factors
psychologcal factors
* emotional arousal -> greater pain intensity
* stress -> altered immune function

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16
Q

diagnostic tests in CRPS

A

no gold standard test
diagnosis of exclusion

17
Q

CRPS outcome measures

A

CRPS severity scale (CSS)

18
Q

multi-disciplinary approach of care team for CRPS

A

psychological intervention
* chronic pain expert
* assess pain, coping skills, and drug abuse/misuse potential
* suicide prevention
psychotherapy
* biofeedback: HR and EMG to teach relaxation
* behavior modification: no caffeine/smoking
* relaxation techniques
* breathing exercises
* self-hypnosis

19
Q

PT intervention for CRPS

A

minimize pain
* do not immobilize: exacerbates demineralization, vasomotor changes, edema and trophic changes
* modalities: HVGS with gloves/socks, contrast baths (avoid temperature extremes), moist heat, fluidotherapy, TENS
* edema control: compression gloves, gentle STM, elevation of involved limb, Jobst pump

20
Q

therapy intervention for CRPS

A
  • desensitization
  • gentle AROM/PROM/PNF
  • tendon gliding exercises
  • postural education
  • mobilization: upper thoracic spine
  • pool therapy
  • aerobic exercise
21
Q

CRPS out of the box interventions

A
  • motivational interviewing
  • pain neuroscience education
  • graded exposure: pacing and rest breaks, stress management, education on fear avoidance and relaxation/breathing
22
Q

graded motor imagery in CRPS

A
  • for more chronic
  • limb laterality recognition: restoration of brain’s concept of L and R
  • imagined movements (visual and motor imagery): conscious access to area of brain involved in intention, preparation, and carrying out movement
  • mirror therapy: brain is tricked into thinking that limb is better than it thinks it is
23
Q

stress loading program in CRPS

A
  • scrubbing: 3 minutes -> 7-10 minutes at 3 times/day
  • carrying: according to tolerance
  • weight can be adjusted by body position
  • force and duration parameters can be altered based on patient response
  • for LE: gradual increase in WB, walking, unaffected on footstool
24
Q

vocational rehabiliation

CRPS

A

addresses work-related activities and assists with return-to-work program
* job site analysis
* work conditioning
* work hardening
* functional capacity evaluation