| Literature DB >> 27046128 |
Lucy H R Whitaker1, Jen Reid2, Alex Choa2, Stuart McFee2, Marta Seretny3, John Wilson3, Rob A Elton4, Katy Vincent5, Andrew W Horne1.
Abstract
Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) affects 5.7-26.6% women worldwide. 55% have no obvious pathology and 40% have associated endometriosis. Neuropathic pain (NeP) is pain arising as a consequence of a lesion/disease affecting the somatosensory system. The prevalence of NeP in women with CPP is not known. The diagnosis of NeP is challenging because there is no gold-standard assessment. Questionnaires have been used in the clinical setting to diagnose NeP in other chronic pain conditions and quantitative sensory testing (QST) has been used in a research setting to identify abnormal sensory function. We aimed to determine if women with chronic pelvic pain (CPP) have a neuropathic pain (NeP) component to their painful symptoms and how this is best assessed. We performed an exploratory prospective cohort study of 72 pre-menopausal women with a diagnosis of CPP. They underwent a clinician completed questionnaire (DN4) and completed the S-LANSS and PainDETECT™ questionnaires. Additionally QST testing was performed by a clinician. They also completed a patient acceptability questionnaire. Clinical features of NeP were identified by both questionnaires and QST. Of the women who were NeP positive, 56%, 35% and 26% were identified by the S-LANSS, DN4 and PainDETECT™ respectively. When NeP was identified by questionnaire, the associated laparoscopy findings were similar irrespective of which questionnaire was used. No subject had entirely unchanged QST parameters. There were distinct loss and gain subgroups, as well as mixed alteration in function, but this was not necessarily clinically significant in all patients. 80% of patients were confident that questionnaires could diagnose NeP, and 90% found them easy to complete. Early identification of NeP in women with CPP with a simple questionnaire could facilitate targeted therapy with neuromodulators, which are cheap, readily available, and have good safety profiles. This approach could prevent unnecessary or fertility-compromising surgery and prolonged treatment with hormones.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27046128 PMCID: PMC4821621 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary of information related to assessment of different peripheral and central somatosensory channels.
| Type of stimulus | Peripheral sensory fibre | Central pathway | Bedside examination | QST |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cold | Aδ | Spinothalamic | Cold reflex hammer, cold thermorollers | Computer controlled thermal testing device |
| Warm | C | Spinothalamic | Warm thermorollers | Computer controlled thermal testing device |
| Heat pain | C, Aδ | Spinothalamic | Warm/hot thermorollers | Computer controlled thermal testing device |
| Static light touch | Aβ | Lemniscal | Q-tip | Calibrated von Frey hairs |
| Vibration | Aβ | Lemniscal | Tuning fork | Vibrameter |
| Brushing | Aβ | Lemniscal | Brush/cotton swab | Brush |
| Pinprick | Aδ, C | Spinothalamic | Pin | Calibrated pins |
| Blunt pressure | Aδ, C | Spinothalamic | Examiner’s thumb | Alogmeter |
Fig 1Lothian Chronic Pain service Modified QST protocol.
Characteristics of subjects.
| Age, mean (SD) [range] | 34.5 (8.85) [20–54] |
| Parity n (percentage) | |
| - Nulliparous | 38 (52.8) |
| - Parous | 34 (47.2) |
| - Previous CS | 13 (18.1) |
| Hormone treatment n (percentage) | |
| - Nil | 30 (41.7) |
| - Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill | 10 (13.9) |
| - Progesterone Only Pill | 2 (2.8) |
| - DepoProvera™ | 2 (2.8) |
| - Levonogesterol releasing intrauterine system | 11 (15.3) |
| - GnRH analogue | 2 (2.8) |
| - Oophorectomy with add back Hormone replacement therapy | 2 (2.8) |
| Laparoscopic findings n (percentage) | |
| - No visible pathology | 26 (37.1) |
| - Endometriosis | 32 (45.7) |
| Stage I | 12 (37.5) |
| Stage II | 7 (21.9) |
| Stage III | 3 (9.4) |
| Stage IV | 8 (25.0) |
| Stage not documented | 2 |
| - Adhesions | 7 (10.0) |
| - Dermoid cysts | 5 (7.1) |
| Total number of operations: mean (SD) [range] | 1.9 (1.1) [0–5] |
| Pain medication n (percentage) | |
| - Analgesics (8 not documented) | 57 (90.5) |
| - Neuroleptics | 23 (32.9) |
| Global pain score /100: mean (SD) [range] | 31.9 (26.3) [0–87] |
| Duration of symptoms in months: mean (SD) [Range] | 92 (94) [6–456] |
Fig 2Questionnaire outcomes.
Correlation between clinical diagnosis and NeP questionnaire outcome.
| S-LANSS | DN4 | PainDETECT™ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 0.8889 | 0.7778 | 0.8571 |
| (95% CI) | (0.5175 to 0.9972) | (0.3999 to 0.9719) | (0.4213 to 0.9964) |
| Specificity | 0.3333 | 1 | 0.5 |
| (95% CI) | (0.008 to 0.9057) | (0.2924 to 1) | (0.0126 to 0.9874) |
| Positive Predictive Value | 0.8 | 1 | 0.8571 |
| (95% CI) | (0.4439 to 0.9748) | (0.5904 to 1) | (0.4213 to 0.9964) |
| Negative Predictive Value | 0.5 | 0.6 | 0.5 |
| (95% CI) | (0.0126 to 0.9874) | (0.1466 to 0.9473) | (0.0126 to 0.9874) |
Fig 3Laparoscopic findings in women with questionnaires positive and negative for NeP.
Fig 4Sensory profiles for punctate pain threshold and thermal stimulus.