| Literature DB >> 27313396 |
Marina de Tommaso1, Lars Arendt-Nielsen2, Ruth Defrin3, Miriam Kunz4, Gisele Pickering5, Massimiliano Valeriani6.
Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases are going to increase as the life expectancy is getting longer. The management of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other dementias, Parkinson's disease (PD) and PD related disorders, motor neuron diseases (MND), Huntington's disease (HD), spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA), and spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), is mainly addressed to motor and cognitive impairment, with special care to vital functions as breathing and feeding. Many of these patients complain of painful symptoms though their origin is variable, and their presence is frequently not considered in the treatment guidelines, leaving their management to the decision of the clinicians alone. However, studies focusing on pain frequency in such disorders suggest a high prevalence of pain in selected populations from 38 to 75% in AD, 40% to 86% in PD, and 19 to 85% in MND. The methods of pain assessment vary between studies so the type of pain has been rarely reported. However, a prevalent nonneuropathic origin of pain emerged for MND and PD. In AD, no data on pain features are available. No controlled therapeutic trials and guidelines are currently available. Given the relevance of pain in neurodegenerative disorders, the comprehensive understanding of mechanisms and predisposing factors, the application and validation of specific scales, and new specific therapeutic trials are needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27313396 PMCID: PMC4904074 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7576292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Neurol ISSN: 0953-4180 Impact factor: 3.342
Summary of the studies on the prevalence of pain among patients with dementia living at home or in nursing homes. Features and location of pain were not available.
| Study design | Number of patients and controls | Assessment method | Frequency of pain | |
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| Barry et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 75 | Interview with patients and caregivers |
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| Barry et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 42 | Interview with patients, nurses, and relatives |
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| Hunt et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 802 | Interview with patients |
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| Werner et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 141 | Category rating scale |
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| Mäntyselkä et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 75 | Interview with the patients |
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| Shega et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 150 | Interview with patients and caregivers |
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| Zwakhalen et al. [ | Observational | Patients: 117 | Observational pain scale |
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Summary of studies on the prevalence and features of pain among patients with Parkinson's disease.
| Study design | Number of patients and controls | Assessment methods | Frequency of pain | Feature and location of pain | |
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| Nègre-Pagès et al. [ | Observational | 450 | Visual analogue scale | 278 patients (61.8%) |
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| Defazio et al. [ | Case control | 402 | Visual analogue scale |
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| Beiske et al. [ | Observational | 176 | Structured interview (SF-36) |
| Musculoskeletal (103 patients) |
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| Valkovic et al. [ | Observational | 100 | Brief Pain Inventory |
| Musculoskeletal (41%) |
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| Tinazzi et al. [ | Observational | 117 | Visual analogue scale |
| Dystonic (19 patients) |
Summary of studies on the prevalence and features of pain among patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
| Study design | Number of patients and controls | Assessment methods | Frequency of pain | Feature and location of pain | |
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| Ganzini et al. [ | Observational | 100 patients | Interview to patients and caregivers | 19% reporting moderate to severe pain | Not reported |
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| Jensen et al. [ | Observational | 193 patients with neuromuscular disease | Neuropathic pain scale, Brief Pain Inventory, quality of life (SF-36) | 60% of ALS patients | “Deep,” “tiring,” “sharp,” and “dull” |
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| Ho et al. [ | Retrospective | 193 patients | Standard medical records | 23% | Shoulder pain |
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| Chiò et al. [ | Case control | 160 patients | Brief Pain Inventory | 56.9% | Pain more frequent in the extremities |
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| Pagnini et al. [ | Observational | 40 patients | Italian Pain Questionnaire, McGill Quality of Life Questionnaire | 51.2% | “Nagging,” |
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| Rivera et al. [ | Observational | 63 | Neuropathic pain scale | 50% | Neuropathic pain |
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| Pizzimenti et al. [ | Observational | 36 | Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory | 71% | Localized in scapular-humeral area and lower limb |
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| Wallace et al. [ | Case control | 42 | Brief Pain Inventory | 85% | Nonneuropathic: |
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| Hanisch et al. [ | Case control | 46 | Brief Pain Inventory | 78% | Cramps |
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| Moisset et al. [ | Observational | 93 | DN4 questionnaire | 66% | 9% neuropathic pain |