| Literature DB >> 26309254 |
Peter Valkovic1, Michal Minar2, Helena Singliarova3, Jan Harsany2, Marta Hanakova2, Jana Martinkova2, Jan Benetin4.
Abstract
Pain is an important and distressing symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). Our aim was to determine the prevalence of pain, its various types and characteristics, as well as its impact on depression and quality of life (QoL) in patients with PD. How pain differs in early- and advanced-stage PD and male and female PD patients was of special interest. One hundred PD patients on dopaminergic medications had a neurological examination and participated in a structured interview on pain characteristics and completed standardized questionnaires. A total of 76% of the patients had pain. The following types of pain were present: musculoskeletal pain accounted for 41% of the total pain, dystonic pain for 17%, central neuropathic pain for 22%, radicular pain for 27%, and other pains (non-radicular low back pain, arthritic, and visceral pain) made up 24%. One type of pain affected 29% of all the subjects, two types 35%, three types 10%, and four types of pain were reported by 2%. All types of pain were more prevalent in advanced-stage PD subjects than in early-stage PD subjects, except for arthritic pain (subclassified under"other pain"). The frequency and intensity of actual, average, and worst experienced pain were significantly more severe in advanced-stage subjects. PD subjects with general pain and in advanced stages were more depressed and had poorer QoL. Depression correlated with worst pain in the last 24 hours and with pain periodicity (the worst depression score in patients with constant pain). QoL correlated with average pain in the last 7 days. Pain is a frequent problem in PD patients, and it worsens during the course of the disease.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26309254 PMCID: PMC4550419 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Overview of studies on the prevalence of pain in Parkinson´s disease.
| Reference | N | Prevalence | Pain classification | Relationship to other domains assessed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 95 | 46% | Musculoskeletal | Correlation with lower age |
| Dystonia | ||||
| Radicular/neuritic | ||||
| Akathisia | ||||
| Joint | ||||
| [ | 117 | 40% | Dystonic | Correlation with UPDRS IV |
| Non-dystonic | ||||
| [ | 450 | 67% | Related to PD | Correlation with depression |
| Not related to PD | ||||
| [ | 96 | 64.9% | Musculoskeletal | No correlation with depression |
| Radicular or neuropathic | ||||
| Secondary to dystonia | ||||
| Central | ||||
| [ | 121 | 66% | Dystonic | |
| Paresthesia/neuropathic | ||||
| Musculoskeletal | ||||
| [ | 402 | 69.9% | Dystonic | |
| Arthralgic | ||||
| Cramping | ||||
| Peripheral neuropathic | ||||
| Central neuropathic | ||||
| [ | 176 | 83% | ||
| [ | 50 | 56% | Musculoskeletal | |
| Dystonic | ||||
| Radicular | ||||
| Articular | ||||
| Headache | ||||
| Unspecified | ||||
| [ | 901 | 29.9% | ||
| [ | 123 | 85% | PD-related | |
| Unrelated to PD | ||||
| Indirectly related to PD | ||||
| Multiple causes | ||||
| Treatment related |
Ford’s pain classification.
| Pain type | Pain features |
|---|---|
| Musculoskeletal pain | Aching, cramping, arthralgic, myalgic sensations in joints, and muscles |
| Associated findings may include muscle tenderness, arthritic changes, skeletal deformity, limited joint mobility, postural abnormalities, and antalgic gait | |
| May be exacerbated by parkinsonian rigidity, stiffness, and immobility, and relieved by mobility | |
| May fluctuate with dose of medication and improves with levodopa | |
| Radicular/neuropathic pain | Pain in a root or nerve territory, associated with motor or sensory signs of nerve or root entrapment |
| Dystonic pain | Associated with sustained twisting movements and postures; muscular contractions often very forceful and painful |
| May fluctuate closely with medication dosing: early morning dystonia, off dystonia, beginning-of-dose and end-of-dose dystonia, peak dose dystonia | |
| Central or primary pain | Burning, tingling, formication, “neuropathic” sensations, often relentless and bizarre in quality, not confined to root or nerve territory |
| Pain may have an autonomic character, with visceral sensations or dyspnea, and vary in parallel with the medication cycle as a non-motor fluctuation | |
| Not explained by rigidity, dystonia, musculoskeletal or internal lesion | |
| Other pain | Primary headache, visceral, arthritic, non-radicular low back pain, oral and genital pain |
Note: in an original paper Ford proposed a 5th type of pain: “akathitic discomfort” [14]; we substituted this type in our study by category “other pain”.
Demographic and basic clinical data.
| Altogether (N = 100) | Early stages (N = 47) | Advanced stages (N = 53) | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 50: 50 | 26: 21 | 24: 29 | |
|
| 65.5 ± 8.8 | 62.9 ± 8.0 | 67.9±8.9 | NS |
| (47–85) | (47–76) | (47–85) | ||
|
| 5.9 ± 4.4 | 4.1±3.4 | 7.5±4.6 | 0.004 |
| (0.5–19) | (0.5–14) | (0.5–19) | ||
|
| 935.5 ± 476.6 | 702.1 ± 337.0 | 1142.5 ± 489.1 | <0.001 |
| (100–2000) | (100–1500) | (300–2000) | ||
|
| 2.6 ± 0.7 | 2.0±0.4 | 3.2±0.4 | <0.001 |
| (1–5) | (1–2.5) | (3–4) |
Fig 1Distribution of pain types in PD patients.
Note the higher prevalence of all types of pain except for “other pain” in the advanced stage of PD.
Fig 2Types of pain in PD patients.
Comparison of early and advanced stages of PD.
| Parameter | Early stage | Advanced stage | p value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pain average/ 7 days | 3.1±2.3 | 3.8 ± 2.6 |
|
| Pain worst/24 h | 2.6±2.6 | 3.8 ± 2.8 |
|
| Pain average/24 h | 2.3±2.0 | 2.9 ± 2.0 |
|
| Pain now | 1.3±1.7 | 2.2±2.8 |
|
| BDI score | 7.0±4.8 | 11.5±5.6 |
|
| PDQ-8 score | 11.3±8.5 | 18.1±9.5 |
|
| Number of pain types | 1.3±1.0 | 1.4±1.1 | 0.07 |
Significant results are bold.
Comparison of the pain characteristics between the sexes (variables with significant differences).
| Mean values (men; women) | P-value | Preponderance | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 62.96; 68.12 | <0.001 | Women |
|
| 4.86; 6.98 | 0.01 | Women |
|
| 1.36; 2.18 | 0.05 | Women |
|
| 2.84; 4.10 | 0.02 | Women |
|
| 2.56; 3.92 | 0.02 | Women |
Correlations of pain characteristics expressed as Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient with quality of life, depression, and selected variables of interest.
| Pain average/ 7 days | Pain worst/ 24 h | Pain least/ 24 h | Pain average/24 h | Pain now | Number of pain types | Pain periodicity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
| NS |
| NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
|
| NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
| NS |
| NS |
|
| NS | NS |
|
| NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
| NS |
|
| NS | NS | NS | NS |
Correlation is significant at the P ≤ 0.01 level (2-tailed); P values are not shown.