Dimitroulas Theodoros, Duarte Rui V, Behura Asis, Kitas George D, Raphael Jon H
Department of Rheumatology, Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, UK.
Department of Pain Management, Dudley Group NHS Foundation Trust, Russells Hall Hospital, Dudley, UK; Faculty of Health, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, UK.
Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2014 Oct;44(2):145-54. doi: 10.1016/j.semarthrit.2014.05.011. Epub 2014 May 14.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is the leading cause of musculoskeletal pain and functional disability worldwide, affecting a growing number of individuals in the western society. Despite various conservative and interventional treatment approaches, the overall management of the condition is problematic, and pain-the major clinical problem of the disease-remains sub-optimally controlled. The objectives of this review are to present the pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying the complexity of pain in OA and to discuss the challenges for new treatment strategies aiming to translate experimental findings into daily clinical practice.
A narrative literature review of studies investigating the existence of a neuropathic component in OA pain was conducted. We searched PubMed, Embase and Scopus for English language publications. A hand-search of reference lists of relevant studies was also performed.
Recent advances have shed additional light on the pathophysiology of osteoarthritic pain, highlighting the contribution of central pain pathways together with the sensitisation of peripheral joint receptors and changes of the nociceptive process induced by local joint inflammation and structural bone tissue changes. Thus, a neuropathic pain component may be predominant in individuals with minor joint changes but with high levels of pain refractory to analgesic treatment, providing an alternative explanation for osteoarthritic pain perception.
A growing amount of evidence suggests that the pain in OA has a neuropathic component in some patients. The deeper understanding of multiple mechanisms of OA pain has led to the use of centrally acting medicines that may have a benefit on alleviating osteoarthritic pain. The ineffective pain management and the increasing rates of disability associated with OA mandate for change in our treatment paradigm.
骨关节炎(OA)是全球肌肉骨骼疼痛和功能障碍的主要原因,在西方社会影响着越来越多的人。尽管有各种保守和介入治疗方法,但该病的整体管理仍存在问题,而疼痛——该疾病的主要临床问题——仍未得到最佳控制。本综述的目的是阐述OA疼痛复杂性背后的病理生理机制,并讨论旨在将实验结果转化为日常临床实践的新治疗策略所面临的挑战。
对研究OA疼痛中是否存在神经病理性成分的研究进行叙述性文献综述。我们在PubMed、Embase和Scopus中检索英文出版物。还对手检了相关研究的参考文献列表。
最近的进展进一步阐明了骨关节炎疼痛的病理生理学,突出了中枢疼痛通路的作用,以及外周关节感受器的敏化和局部关节炎症及骨组织结构变化引起的伤害感受过程的改变。因此,在关节变化较小但疼痛程度高且对镇痛治疗难治的个体中,神经病理性疼痛成分可能占主导,这为骨关节炎疼痛感知提供了另一种解释。
越来越多的证据表明,在某些患者中,OA疼痛存在神经病理性成分。对OA疼痛多种机制的更深入理解导致了使用可能有助于减轻骨关节炎疼痛的中枢作用药物。OA相关的无效疼痛管理和残疾率上升要求我们改变治疗模式。