Individuals With Prior Chronic Pain and Long-Term Opioid Treatment May Experience Persistence of That Pain Even After Subsequent Complete Cervical Spinal Cord Injury: Suggestions From a Prospective Case-Controlled Study

IF 1.9 Q2 REHABILITATION
Jeffrey S. Hecht MD , Kyle L. Johnson Moore PhD , Roy F. Roberts Jr MD
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Abstract

Objective

To determine whether chronic pain persists after complete spinal cord injury (SCI).

Design

Prospective observational study regarding the outcome of pre-existent chronic pain of inpatients admitted with new clinically diagnosed complete cervical SCI. For patients who acknowledged chronic pain of ≥3 years duration before the SCI, further questions explored whether they still experienced that pain, whether they were experiencing current posttraumatic pain, and whether they had any past exposure to opioids. The included patients were identified during the initial consultation in the trauma center for treatment of the SCI.

Setting

Level I trauma center.

Participants

From a total of 49 participants with acute cervical SCI with clinically diagnosed complete motor and sensory tetraplegia admitted between 2018 and 2020, 7 were selected on the basis of a history of chronic pain.

Intervention

Collected complete history and performed physical examination with serial follow-ups during the acute hospital stay until death or discharge.

Main Outcome Measures

The primary outcome was a finding of chronic pain experienced before new clinical diagnosis of complete SCI, compared with whether or not that pain continued after the SCI injury. The secondary outcome was the relation of persistent pain with opioid use; it was formulated after data collection.

Results

Among 49 patients with clinically diagnosed complete cervical SCIs, 7 had experienced prior chronic pain. Four participants experienced a continuation of the prior pain after their complete tetraplegia (4/7), whereas 3 participants did not (3/7). All the participants with continued pain had been previously treated with opioids, whereas those whose pain ceased had not received chronic opioid therapy.

Conclusions

There may be a unique form of chronic pain that is based in the brain, irrespective of peripheral pain or spinal mechanisms. Otherwise healthy people with longstanding antecedent chronic pain whose pain persists after acute clinically complete SCI with tetraplegia may provide a new model for evaluation of brain-based pain. Opioids may be requisite for this type of pain.

既往有慢性疼痛并接受过长期阿片类药物治疗的患者,即使在其后完全性颈脊髓损伤后仍可能持续存在这种疼痛:一项前瞻性病例对照研究提出的建议
目的 确定完全性脊髓损伤(SCI)后是否会持续存在慢性疼痛。设计 对新入院的临床诊断为完全性颈椎 SCI 的住院患者进行前慢性疼痛结果的前瞻性观察研究。对于承认在脊髓损伤前慢性疼痛持续时间≥3年的患者,进一步询问他们是否仍在经历这种疼痛,他们目前是否正在经历创伤后疼痛,以及他们过去是否接触过阿片类药物。纳入的患者是在创伤中心初诊治疗 SCI 时确定的。设置一级创伤中心。参与者从 2018 年至 2020 年期间收治的临床诊断为完全性运动和感觉四肢瘫痪的急性颈椎 SCI 患者共 49 人中,根据慢性疼痛史选择了 7 人。干预收集完整病史并进行体格检查,在急性期住院期间进行连续随访,直至死亡或出院。主要结果测量主要结果是发现在新的临床诊断完全性 SCI 之前经历过慢性疼痛,并与 SCI 损伤后疼痛是否持续进行比较。次要结果是持续性疼痛与阿片类药物使用的关系;该结果在数据收集后制定。结果在 49 名临床诊断为完全性颈椎 SCI 的患者中,有 7 人曾经历过慢性疼痛。其中 4 人在完全四肢瘫痪后疼痛持续(4/7),3 人没有持续(3/7)。所有持续疼痛的参与者之前都接受过阿片类药物治疗,而疼痛停止的参与者则没有接受过长期阿片类药物治疗。临床上急性完全性脊髓损伤导致四肢瘫痪后疼痛仍在持续的其他健康人群,可能为评估脑源性疼痛提供了一个新的模型。此类疼痛可能需要阿片类药物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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