Han Eun Young, Jung Han Young, Kim Myeong Ok
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Jeju National University Hospital, University of Jeju College of Medicine , Jeju , Republic of Korea and.
Disabil Rehabil. 2014;36(13):1080-4. doi: 10.3109/09638288.2013.829530. Epub 2013 Sep 19.
The objective was to determine whether the abnormal finding of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) associated with the development of type I complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) after stroke.
This was a retrospective study conducted from January, 2003, to December, 2007. Seventy patients were confirmed as CRPS type I, and one hundred and eighty-two patients were assigned to the control group. The initial clinical data were reviewed including age, gender, main type of stroke, lateralization and location of the lesion, presence of glenohumeral subluxation, and the development of CRPS. Somatosensory evoked potentials tests (SEP) in median nerve (N20) and posterior tibial nerve (P37) were performed.
CRPS groups revealed significantly higher incidence of the absent and abnormal hemiplegic median SEP, hemorrhagic stroke, and glenohumeral subluxation (GHS). Binary logistic regression analysis indicated that GHS (exp.(B)=4.083, p<0.01) with the absent median SEP (exp.(B)=3.246, p<0.01) were significant independent predictors of CRPS onset.
In conclusion, GHS and the absent median SEP at sub-acute phase of stroke were primary predictors of the onset of post-stoke CRPS. Implications for Rehabilitation Recent investigations have suggested that autonomic, motor and somatosensory abnormalities of CRPS are impairments involving the central nervous system (CNS) as well as the peripheral neurogenic inflammatory process. However, the understanding of the pathophysiology of CRPS is still far from complete. The absence of SEP at the sub-acute stage of stroke correlated with the onset of post-stroke CRPS type I. The SEP evaluation at the sub-acute period after stroke might be generally used for predicting the concomitant development of post-stroke CRPS type I as well as functional recovery after stroke.
本研究旨在确定体感诱发电位(SEP)异常发现是否与脑卒中后I型复杂性区域疼痛综合征(CRPS)的发生有关。
这是一项回顾性研究,时间跨度为2003年1月至2007年12月。70例患者被确诊为I型CRPS,182例患者被分配至对照组。回顾初始临床数据,包括年龄、性别、脑卒中主要类型、病变的侧别和位置、肩肱关节半脱位情况以及CRPS的发生情况。对正中神经(N20)和胫后神经(P37)进行体感诱发电位测试(SEP)。
CRPS组中偏瘫正中SEP缺失和异常、出血性脑卒中以及肩肱关节半脱位(GHS)的发生率显著更高。二元逻辑回归分析表明,GHS(exp.(B)=4.083,p<0.01)以及正中SEP缺失(exp.(B)=3.246,p<0.01)是CRPS发病的重要独立预测因素。
总之,脑卒中亚急性期的GHS和正中SEP缺失是脑卒中后CRPS发病的主要预测因素。康复意义近期研究表明,CRPS的自主神经、运动和体感异常是涉及中枢神经系统(CNS)以及外周神经源性炎症过程的损伤。然而,对CRPS病理生理学的理解仍远未完善。脑卒中亚急性期SEP缺失与脑卒中后I型CRPS的发生相关。脑卒中后亚急性期的SEP评估可能普遍用于预测脑卒中后I型CRPS的并发发展以及脑卒中后的功能恢复。