Department of Anesthesia, Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Pain Med. 2010 Aug;11(8):1224-38. doi: 10.1111/j.1526-4637.2010.00911.x.
Complex regional pain syndrome-type I (CRPS-I; reflex sympathetic dystrophy) is a chronic pain condition that usually follows a deep-tissue injury such as fracture or sprain. The cause of the pain is unknown. We have developed an animal model (chronic post-ischemia pain) that creates CRPS-I-like symptomatology. The model is produced by occluding the blood flow to one hind paw for 3 hours under general anesthesia. Following reperfusion, the treated hind paw exhibits an initial phase of hyperemia and edema. This is followed by mechano-hyperalgesia, mechano-allodynia, and cold-allodynia that lasted for at least 1 month. Light microscopic analyses and electron microscopic analyses of the nerves at the site of the tourniquet show that the majority of these animals have no sign of injury to myelinated or unmyelinated axons. However, electron microscopy shows that the ischemia-reperfusion injury produces a microvascular injury, slow-flow/no-reflow, in the capillaries of the hind paw muscle and digital nerves. We propose that the slow-flow/no-reflow phenomenon initiates and maintains deep-tissue ischemia and inflammation, leading to the activation of muscle nociceptors, and the ectopic activation of sensory afferent axons due to endoneurial ischemia and inflammation. These data, and a large body of clinical evidence, suggest that in at least a subset of CRPS-I patients, the fundamental cause of the abnormal pain sensations is ischemia and inflammation due to microvascular pathology in deep tissues, leading to a combination of inflammatory and neuropathic pain processes. Moreover, we suggest a unifying idea that relates the pathogenesis of CRPS-I to that of CRPS-II. Lastly, our hypothesis suggests that the role of the sympathetic nervous system in CRPS-I is a factor that is not fundamentally causative, but may have an important contributory role in early-stage disease.
复杂性区域疼痛综合征 I 型(CRPS-I;反射性交感神经营养不良)是一种慢性疼痛病症,通常发生在深部组织损伤如骨折或扭伤后。疼痛的原因尚不清楚。我们已经开发出一种动物模型(慢性缺血后疼痛),可产生类似 CRPS-I 的症状。该模型通过在全身麻醉下将一只后脚的血流阻断 3 小时来产生。再灌注后,受治疗的后脚会出现初始的充血和水肿阶段。随后出现机械性痛觉过敏、机械性触痛和冷触痛,持续至少 1 个月。对止血带部位神经的光镜分析和电镜分析表明,大多数动物的有髓或无髓轴突没有损伤迹象。然而,电镜显示,缺血再灌注损伤会导致后脚肌肉和指神经毛细血管的微血管损伤、血流缓慢/无再流。我们提出,慢血流/无再流现象会引发并维持深部组织缺血和炎症,导致肌肉伤害感受器的激活,以及感觉传入轴突的异位激活,这是由于神经内膜缺血和炎症所致。这些数据以及大量临床证据表明,在至少一部分 CRPS-I 患者中,异常疼痛感觉的根本原因是深部组织微血管病变引起的缺血和炎症,导致炎症和神经病理性疼痛过程的结合。此外,我们提出了一个统一的观点,将 CRPS-I 的发病机制与 CRPS-II 的发病机制联系起来。最后,我们的假设表明,交感神经系统在 CRPS-I 中的作用不是根本原因,但在疾病早期可能具有重要的促成作用。