Elahi Foad, Reddy Chandan G
Center of Pain Medicine, University of Iowa, 200 Hawkins Drive 5JPP, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Case Rep Med. 2014;2014:613921. doi: 10.1155/2014/613921. Epub 2014 Aug 19.
Venipuncture, the most frequently performed invasive medical procedure, is usually benign. Generally it produces only transitory mild discomfort. Venipuncture-induced neuropathic pain is hard to recognize at an early stage. Medical literature reviews show that there is not adequate medical knowledge about this important subject. The inciting incident in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) can often seem far too trivial to result in a condition with such severe pathophysiologic effects. The practicing physician has little information available to enable early recognition of the condition, initiation of multidisciplinary treatment modalities, and proper referral to pain specialists. We encountered a unique case of venipuncture-induced complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). The patient is a 52-year-old school teacher with no significant past medical history, who presented initially to the Center of Pain Medicine with left upper extremity pain. The pain started while phlebotomy was performed in the patient's left antecubital area for routine blood check. The patient's pain did not improve with multiple medications, physical therapy, or several nerve blocks. The patient demonstrated all the signs and symptoms of chronic neuropathic pain of CRPS in the upper extremity with minimal response to the continuous pain management. We decided to proceed with cervical spinal cord nerve stimulation along with continuing other modalities. The patient responded to this combination. During the follow-up, we noticed that the patient's pain course was complicated by extension of the CRPS to her lower extremity. We will describe the course of treatment for the patient in this paper. In this paper we will discuss the electrical neuromodulation as an important modality in addition to the multidisciplinary pain management for a patient with venipuncture-induced chronic neuropathic pain.
静脉穿刺是最常进行的侵入性医疗操作,通常是良性的。一般来说,它只会产生短暂的轻微不适。静脉穿刺引起的神经性疼痛在早期很难识别。医学文献综述表明,关于这个重要主题的医学知识并不充分。复杂区域疼痛综合征(CRPS)的诱发事件往往看似微不足道,却能导致具有如此严重病理生理效应的病症。执业医师几乎没有可用信息来早期识别这种病症、启动多学科治疗模式并正确转诊至疼痛专科医生。我们遇到了一例独特的静脉穿刺诱发的复杂区域疼痛综合征(CRPS)病例。患者是一名52岁的学校教师,既往无重大病史,最初因左上肢疼痛就诊于疼痛医学中心。疼痛始于在患者左肘前区进行静脉采血以进行常规血液检查时。患者的疼痛在使用多种药物、物理治疗或多次神经阻滞治疗后均未改善。患者表现出上肢CRPS慢性神经性疼痛的所有体征和症状,对持续的疼痛管理反应甚微。我们决定在继续其他治疗方式的同时进行颈脊髓神经刺激治疗。患者对这种联合治疗有反应。在随访期间,我们注意到患者的疼痛病程因CRPS扩展至下肢而变得复杂。我们将在本文中描述该患者的治疗过程。在本文中,我们将讨论除多学科疼痛管理外,电神经调节作为治疗静脉穿刺诱发的慢性神经性疼痛患者的一种重要方式。