| Literature DB >> 19232118 |
A Lee Dellon1, Eugenia Andonian, Gedge D Rosson.
Abstract
The hypothesis is explored that CRPS I (the "new" RSD) persists due to undiagnosed injured joint afferents, and/or cutaneous neuromas, and/or nerve compressions, and is, therefore, a misdiagnosed form of CRPS II (the "new" causalgia). An IRB-approved, retrospective chart review on a series of 100 consecutive patients with "RSD" identified 40 upper and 30 lower extremity patients for surgery based upon their history, physical examination, neurosensory testing, and nerve blocks. Based upon decreased pain medication usage and recovery of function, outcome in the upper extremity, at a mean of 27.9 months follow-up (range of 9 to 81 months), gave results that were excellent in 40% (16 of 40 patients), good in 40% (16 of 40 patients) and failure 20% (8 of 40 patients). In the lower extremity, at a mean of 23.0 months follow-up (range of 9 to 69 months) the results were excellent in 47% (14 of 30 patients), good in 33% (10 of 30 patients) and failure 20% (6 of 30 patients). It is concluded that most patients referred with a diagnosis of CRPS I have continuing pain input from injured joint or cutaneous afferents, and/or nerve compressions, and, therefore, similar to a patient with CRPS II, they can be treated successfully with an appropriate peripheral nerve surgical strategy.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19232118 PMCID: PMC2649919 DOI: 10.1186/1749-7221-4-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Brachial Plex Peripher Nerve Inj ISSN: 1749-7221
Demographics
| Age mean, range (yrs) | Interval Post-Injury mean, range (mo.) | Follow-Up mean, range (mo.) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 49.5 (21–82) | 45.4 (6–192) | 27.9 (9–81) | |
| 35.3 (24–73) | 56.5 (4–249) | 23.0 (9–69) | |
Injury mechanism
| Work Injury | MVA | Iatrogenic | Personal Injury | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 54% | 5% | 27% | 14% | |
| 36% | 6% | 29% | 29% | |
Number of operations of each type required*
| Neurolysis | Joint Denervation | Neuroma Resection | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 | 5 | 19 | |
| 27 | 9 | 15 | |
* total numbers are greater than number of patients: most patients required more than one nerve resected and/or denervation and/or neurolysis to achieve relief
** neurolysis included the brachial plexus (2), carpal (5) and cubital tunnel (9) and radial sensory (9) nerves, while denervated joints included the elbow (1) and wrist(4), and neuromas were resected from the radial sensory (5), lateral antebrachial (7), posterior cutaneous nerve of the forearm (3), medial brachial (1), medial antebrachial nerves (2), and a digital nerve that was reconstructed with a conduit.
*** neurolysis included the common peroneal (10), superficial (5) and deep peroneal (1) nerves, interdigital nerve (1) and release of the four medial ankle tunnels for the tibial nerve (10), while denervated joints included the knee (5), and ankle (4), and neuromas were resected from the superficial peroneal nerve (4), saphenous (6), sural (2) and medial calcaneal nerves (3).