Diagnostic Guidance for Chronic Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type I and Type II from The American Society of Interventional Physicians (ASIPP).

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain physician Pub Date : 2025-07-01
Christopher Gharibo, Miles Day, Steve M Aydin, Alan D Kaye, Salahadin Abdi, Sudhir Diwan, Lisa V Doan, Danielle Feng, Kris Ferguson, Kirolos Georges, Andrew Kaufman, Nebojsa Nick Knezevic, Sean Li, Franzes A Liongson, Devi Nampiaparampil, Annu Navani, Mahendra Sanapati, Michael E Schatman, Amol Soin, Peter S Staats, Giustino Varrassi, Jing Wang, Laxmaiah Manchikanti
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is a challenging and often disabling condition marked by persistent pain, most commonly in a limb following injury or surgery. It presents with a wide array of symptoms, including intense pain, swelling, alterations in skin color and temperature, motor dysfunction, and trophic changes such as skin and tissue atrophy. While the precise cause of CRPS is not fully understood, it is thought to stem from abnormal nervous system activity, leading to heightened pain sensitivity and inflammatory responses. A thorough understanding of CRPS is essential for accurate diagnosis, effective treatment, and enhancing patients' quality of life.Although attempts have been made to distinguish between acute and chronic CRPS, there are currently no established diagnostic criteria specific to chronic CRPS in medical literature.

Objective: This ASIPP guidance document offers updated, evidence-based recommendations for the diagnosis and management of Chronic Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), with a primary focus on introducing novel, time-based diagnostic criteria specific to the chronic phase. These proposed criteria address significant gaps in the current literature, where existing standards, such as the Budapest Criteria, do not sufficiently differentiate between the acute and chronic stages of the condition.

Methods: An expert panel convened by the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP) conducted a comprehensive literature review and employed a structured consensus process to develop recommendations. Acknowledging that the clinical and pathological characteristics of CRPS change significantly beyond 12 months, the panel proposed chronic-specific diagnostic criteria based on disease duration, clinical history, physical examination findings, and optional diagnostic tests. These draft criteria were refined through multidisciplinary input and expert consensus.

Results: The diagnostic framework for chronic CRPS consists of four key components:General Criteria - Require fulfillment of the Budapest Criteria for at least 12 months, continued recognition of CRPS as a diagnosis of exclusion, and differentiation from generalized nociplastic pain syndromes.History-Based Criteria - Mandate the presence of at least three out of five specific historical features.Physical Examination Criteria - Include asymmetric limb findings, sensory disturbances, and musculoskeletal changes.Optional Diagnostic Testing - May involve assessments such as intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) and imaging evidence of regional bone demineralization.This framework builds upon the Budapest Criteria by incorporating time-dependent features of chronic CRPS, including musculoskeletal dystrophy, neurogenic inflammation, and sympathetic dysfunction. Emerging objective tools-such as quantitative sensory testing (QST), skin biopsy for IENFD, functional MRI, and serum biomarkers of neuroinflammation-may further support diagnosis in complex or uncertain cases.Treatment recommendations highlight a multimodal strategy that integrates physical rehabilitation, pharmacologic management of neuropathic pain, sympathetic nerve blocks, and advanced neuromodulation. Emphasis is placed on individualized care pathways tailored to disease stage and patient-specific characteristics.

Conclusions: This article presents the first structured, time-sensitive diagnostic criteria for chronic CRPS, aimed at improving diagnostic accuracy and informing treatment strategies. Adoption of these criteria may enhance clinical outcomes and promote further research into the natural history and pathophysiology of CRPS progression.

美国介入医师学会(ASIPP)慢性复杂区域性疼痛综合征I型和II型诊断指南。
背景:复杂区域疼痛综合征(CRPS)是一种具有挑战性且常致残的疾病,其特征是持续疼痛,最常见于肢体损伤或手术后。它表现为一系列广泛的症状,包括剧烈疼痛、肿胀、皮肤颜色和温度的改变、运动功能障碍和营养变化,如皮肤和组织萎缩。虽然CRPS的确切原因尚不完全清楚,但人们认为它源于神经系统活动异常,导致疼痛敏感性升高和炎症反应。深入了解CRPS对于准确诊断、有效治疗、提高患者生活质量至关重要。虽然已经尝试区分急性和慢性CRPS,但目前在医学文献中尚无针对慢性CRPS的既定诊断标准。目的:本ASIPP指南文件为慢性复杂区域性疼痛综合征(CRPS)的诊断和管理提供了最新的、基于证据的建议,主要侧重于引入针对慢性期的新的、基于时间的诊断标准。这些拟议的标准解决了当前文献中的重大空白,其中现有标准,如布达佩斯标准,不能充分区分病情的急性和慢性阶段。方法:由美国介入疼痛医师协会(ASIPP)召集的专家小组进行了全面的文献综述,并采用结构化的共识过程来制定建议。考虑到CRPS的临床和病理特征在12个月后会发生显著变化,专家小组提出了基于病程、临床病史、体格检查结果和可选诊断测试的慢性特异性诊断标准。这些标准草案是通过多学科投入和专家共识加以完善的。结果:慢性CRPS的诊断框架由四个关键部分组成:一般标准-需要满足布达佩斯标准至少12个月,继续承认CRPS为排除性诊断,并与广泛性伤害性疼痛综合征区分开来。基于历史的标准-要求至少存在五个特定历史特征中的三个。体格检查标准-包括肢体不对称、感觉障碍和肌肉骨骼改变。可选诊断测试-可能包括评估,如表皮内神经纤维密度(IENFD)和局部骨脱矿的影像学证据。该框架建立在布达佩斯标准的基础上,结合了慢性CRPS的时间依赖性特征,包括肌肉骨骼营养不良、神经源性炎症和交感神经功能障碍。新兴的客观工具——如定量感觉测试(QST)、IENFD的皮肤活检、功能性MRI和神经炎症的血清生物标志物——可能进一步支持复杂或不确定病例的诊断。治疗建议强调多模式策略,包括物理康复、神经性疼痛的药物治疗、交感神经阻滞和高级神经调节。重点放在个性化的护理途径量身定制的疾病阶段和患者的具体特点。结论:本文提出了第一个结构化的、时间敏感的慢性CRPS诊断标准,旨在提高诊断准确性并为治疗策略提供信息。采用这些标准可以提高临床结果,并促进对CRPS进展的自然史和病理生理学的进一步研究。
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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来源期刊
Pain physician
Pain physician CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
21.60%
发文量
234
期刊介绍: Pain Physician Journal is the official publication of the American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP). The open access journal is published 6 times a year. Pain Physician Journal is a peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary, open access journal written by and directed to an audience of interventional pain physicians, clinicians and basic scientists with an interest in interventional pain management and pain medicine. Pain Physician Journal presents the latest studies, research, and information vital to those in the emerging specialty of interventional pain management – and critical to the people they serve.
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