病例报告:认知多感官康复后缓解幻肢痛

Marina Zernitz, Carla Rizzello, Marco Rigoni, Ann Van de Winckel
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引用次数: 0

摘要

缓解对传统疗法有抵抗力的截肢患者的幻肢痛(PLP)仍然是一项挑战。虽然幻肢痛的原因尚不清楚,但有一种模式认为,截肢后与大脑皮层重映射有关的不适应可塑性会导致心理肢体表征(MBR)的改变,从而导致幻肢痛。认知多感官康复(CMR)可通过恢复躯体表征来减轻其他神经系统疾病的疼痛。一名 26 岁的女性因左脚神经性疼痛衰弱六年并伴有椎间盘突出导致的足部畸形,在多次治疗(如硬膜外刺激器、手术、止痛药)未果的情况下截肢了第三条腿的近端部分,之后经历了剧烈的 PLP。PLP 对止痛药和镜像疗法产生了抗药性。PLP 导致无法穿戴假肢。患者接受了 35 次 CMR 治疗(2012 年 10 月至 12 月,工作日每天 2 次)。CMR 提供健侧的多感官辨别练习和双侧肢体现在和过去动作的多感官运动想象练习,以恢复 MBR 并减少 PLP。CMR 治疗后,神经性疼痛的 PLP 从 6.5-9.5/10 降至 0/10,肌肉疼痛的 PLP 仅为 4-5.5/10。麦吉尔疼痛问卷评分从 39/78 降至 5/78,身份(ID)-疼痛评分从 5/5 降至 0/5。出院后,她的止痛药至少减少了 50%。在 10 个月的随访中(2013 年 9 月),她不再服用美沙酮或芬太尼。出院后,她在门诊接受了 CMR 治疗,学会了使用假肢行走,逐渐不再需要拐杖就能在室内外独立行走(2013 年 9 月)。目前(2024 年 3 月),她已不再服用止痛药,并在没有辅助设备的情况下使用假肢独立行走。PLP 已得到控制。该病例研究似乎支持这样的假设:CMR 可恢复 MBR,从而长期(12 年)减少 PLP。MBR 的恢复可能与恢复残肢和截肢对当前和过去动作的准确多感官运动想象有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Case Report: Phantom limb pain relief after cognitive multisensory rehabilitation
Relieving phantom limb pain (PLP) after amputation in patients resistant to conventional therapy remains a challenge. While the causes for PLP are unclear, one model suggests that maladaptive plasticity related to cortical remapping following amputation leads to altered mental body representations (MBR) and contributes to PLP. Cognitive Multisensory Rehabilitation (CMR) has led to reduced pain in other neurologic conditions by restoring MBR. This is the first study using CMR to relieve PLP.A 26-year-old woman experienced excruciating PLP after amputation of the third proximal part of the leg, performed after several unsuccessful treatments (i.e., epidural stimulator, surgeries, analgesics) for debilitating neuropathic pain in the left foot for six years with foot deformities resulting from herniated discs. The PLP was resistant to pain medication and mirror therapy. PLP rendered donning a prosthesis impossible. The patient received 35 CMR sessions (2×/day during weekdays, October–December 2012). CMR provides multisensory discrimination exercises on the healthy side and multisensory motor imagery exercises of present and past actions in both limbs to restore MBR and reduce PLP.After CMR, PLP reduced from 6.5–9.5/10 to 0/10 for neuropathic pain with only 4–5.5/10 for muscular pain after exercising on the Numeric Pain Rating Scale. McGill Pain Questionnaire scores reduced from 39/78 to 5/78, and Identity (ID)-Pain scores reduced from 5/5 to 0/5. Her pain medication was reduced by at least 50% after discharge. At 10-month follow-up (9/2013), she no longer took Methadone or Fentanyl. After discharge, receiving CMR as outpatient, she learned to walk with a prosthesis, and gradually did not need crutches anymore to walk independently indoors and outdoors (9/2013). At present (3/2024), she no longer takes pain medication and walks independently with the prosthesis without assistive devices. PLP is under control. She addresses flare-ups with CMR exercises on her own, using multisensory motor imagery, bringing the pain down within 10–15 min.The case study seems to support the hypothesis that CMR restores MBR which may lead to long-term (12-year) PLP reduction. MBR restoration may be linked to restoring accurate multisensory motor imagery of the remaining and amputated limb regarding present and past actions.
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