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1/28. Complex regional pain syndrome.

    Complex regional pain syndrome is a chronic pain syndrome that is often instigated by postoperative or post-traumatic events. The disease process can progress through three stages, the first of which tends to respond best to treatment. A review of the literature is presented, followed by a report of a patient who developed symptoms of complex regional pain syndrome following a water-skiing accident.
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2/28. Allergic reaction to spinal cord stimulator.

    OBJECTIVE: The objective was to report on the possibility of allergic reaction to the components of a spinal cord stimulator. DESIGN: We describe a severe allergic reaction after the insertion of a spinal cord stimulator in a patient with complex regional pain syndrome type 1. SETTING: The patient was being followed in an office-based pain management practice. PATIENT: The patient is a 41-year-old woman with complex regional pain syndrome type 1, posttrauma. Intervention: Insertion of a cervical and lumbar spinal cord stimulator. OUTCOME MEASURES: The outcome measures were a numerical scale of pain intensity and the ability to perform the activities of daily living. RESULTS: Adequate pain control complicated by allergic reaction. CONCLUSIONS: There exists a possibility that a patient may experience an allergic reaction to spinal cord stimulator components. Recognition of such contact sensitivity is important for physicians implanting such devices. patients may be misdiagnosed as having infections, which can delay appropriate management; definitive diagnosis can be confirmed with a patch test. Treatment consists of removal of such devices.
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ranking = 0.28571428571429
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3/28. Complex regional pain syndrome with selective emotional sudomotor failure.

    We report a patient with sympathetically maintained pain following a mild limb injury. Only emotional sudomotor failure was found in the painful limb. Thermoregulatory vasomotor function was intact. However, the patient had other target-specific sympathetic lesions, including thermoregulatory vasomotor failure in a different limb, not associated with pain. We hypothesize that the sympathetic failure preceded the symptoms and that the mild injury may have provoked collateral sprouting of emotional sudomotor fibres, coupling them with somatic sensory fibres to cause continuous pain.
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4/28. Complex regional pain syndrome in childhood: report of three cases.

    We describe three patients with the limb pain of complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) in childhood with autonomic nervous system function involvement. Their autonomic nerve abnormality was non-invasively examined by means of laser doppler flowmetry (LDF) and a sympathetic skin response (SSR) test. In one it was resolved with physiotherapy, but the others needed epidural anesthesia for pain control. Though CRPS used to be recognized as a refractory disorder in adults, childhood cases have been found in recent years, generally having a better prognosis than adult ones. However, even in the children, the prognosis or responses to the same therapy vary, and there are progressive and refractory cases. CRPS should be considered as a differential diagnosis of unexplained persistent limb pain even in childhood for early and appropriate management.
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ranking = 0.71428571428571
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5/28. Complex regional pain syndrome (type I) after electrical injury: a case report of treatment with continuous epidural block.

    A 26-year-old man presented with severe complex regional pain syndrome type I of the affected limb after a work-related electrical injury. He suffered causalgia-like pain with no electrodiagnostic evidence of nerve injury. Early steroid and analgesic regimens did not adequately relieve these symptoms. His symptoms were temporarily relieved several times with stellate ganglion blocks. The patient underwent a cervical epidural block with a local anesthetic as well as a narcotic agonist over a 4-day period, which resulted in prompt, remarkable pain relief. Vocational rehabilitation was instituted as the pain subsided.
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6/28. Chemical sympathectomy for neuropathic pain: does it work? Case report and systematic literature review.

    OBJECTIVE: To determine if chemical sympathectomy successfully reduces limb neuropathic pain. DESIGN: Systematic literature review of the effectiveness of phenol or alcohol sympathectomy for extremity neuropathic pain. PATIENT: A 29-year-old female with complex regional pain syndrome of both lower extremities after back surgery who was submitted to bilateral lumbar chemical sympathectomy. SEARCH STRATEGY: The Cochrane database of Systematic Reviews, the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, medline, and EMBASE were systematically searched. OUTCOME MEASURES: (1) For the patient in question: spontaneous pain, allodynia, pinprick hyperalgesia, pressure evoked pain; (2) For the literature review: meaningful versus nonmeaningful pain relief based on degree and duration (>2 weeks) of pain relief. RESULTS: (1) The case reported experienced partial temporary relief of pain primarily related to selective modulation of allodynia, but not deep pain or pinprick hyperalgesia; (2) 44% of 66 patients in 13 studies that met the authors' inclusion criteria experienced meaningful pain relief. Whereas 19% experienced no meaningful relief, for the remaining 37% of the patients no conclusions regarding duration and degree of relief could be drawn due to poor reporting of outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Based on the case reported and systematic literature review, chemical sympathectomy seems to have at best a temporary effect, limited to cutaneous allodynia. Despite the popularity of chemical sympatholysis, only few patients and poorly defined outcomes are reported in the literature, substantiating the need for well-designed studies on the effectiveness of the procedure.
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ranking = 0.14285714285714
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7/28. Complex regional pain syndrome: a report of two cases recalcitrant to usual treatment protocols.

    In this report the authors present a review of complex regional pain syndrome and two case reports of complex regional pain syndrome that were recalcitrant to the usual treatments. The first case presented is a middle-aged female who developed signs and symptoms of post-traumatic complex regional pain syndrome. The second case is a woman with a pre-existing history of complex regional pain syndrome whose condition worsened after surgery despite appropriate perioperative precautions. These cases are unique because in both cases an early diagnosis of complex regional pain syndrome was established, yet they were both resistant to the usual treatment protocols.
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ranking = 1.2857142857143
keywords = syndrome
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8/28. Enigmatic pain referred to the teeth and jaws.

    A number of obscure syndromes can mimic dental or jaw pain in the absence of pathosis within these structures. This enigmatic dental pain includes conditions such as pretrigeminal neuralgia, complex regional pain syndrome, temporal tendinitis, and carotodynia. Each of these syndromes is described through a pertinent case report to illustrate appropriate diagnosis and treatment.
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ranking = 0.42857142857143
keywords = syndrome
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9/28. Complex regional pain syndrome after thromboendarterectomy: which type is it?

    The authors describe a complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) and discuss its type according to the presence or absence of nerve injury. A patient underwent thromboendarterectomy of the right popliteal artery. Subsequently, right lower limb reflex sympathetic dystrophy developed, which was confirmed by scintigraphy and responded well to calcitonin treatment. Typing according to the new classification of CRPS type I or II with possible nerve injury is discussed, and a short review of the literature is included.
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keywords = syndrome
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10/28. Complex regional pain syndrome and lyme borreliosis: two different diseases?

    Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a frequent complication appearing as pain of unexplained pathogenesis. Its association with Lyme borreliosis (LB) is fairly rare. In the presented clinical case, clinical features as well as the findings of radiological, radionuclide, neurophysiological and serological investigations pointed to an association between the two conditions. The patient fulfilled the criteria for both diagnoses, i.e. CRPS and LB. The subsequent antibiotic therapy resulted in a complete remission of both clinical entities.
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