| Literature DB >> 34547367 |
Dan Ziegler1, Solomon Tesfaye2, Vincenza Spallone3, Irina Gurieva4, Juma Al Kaabi5, Boris Mankovsky6, Emil Martinka7, Gabriela Radulian8, Khue Thy Nguyen9, Alin O Stirban10, Tsvetalina Tankova11, Tamás Varkonyi12, Roy Freeman13, Péter Kempler14, Andrew Jm Boulton15.
Abstract
Diabetic sensorimotor polyneuropathy (DSPN) affects around one third of people with diabetes and accounts for considerable morbidity, increased risk of mortality, reduced quality of life, and increased health care costs resulting particularly from neuropathic pain and foot ulcers. Painful DSPN is encountered in 13-26% of diabetes patients, while up to 50% of patients with DSPN may be asymptomatic. Unfortunately, DSPN still remains inadequately diagnosed and treated. Herein we provide international expert consensus recommendations and algorithms for screening, diagnosis, and treatment of DSPN in clinical practice derived from a Delphi process. Typical neuropathic symptoms include pain, paresthesias, and numbness particularly in the feet and calves. Clinical diagnosis of DSPN is based on neuropathic symptoms and signs (deficits). Management of DSPN includes three cornerstones: (1) lifestyle modification, optimal diabetes treatment aimed at near-normoglycemia, and multifactorial cardiovascular risk intervention, (2) pathogenetically oriented pharmacotherapy (e.g. α-lipoic acid and benfotiamine), and (3) symptomatic treatment of neuropathic pain including analgesic pharmacotherapy (antidepressants, anticonvulsants, opioids, capsaicin 8% patch and combinations, if required) and non-pharmacological options. Considering the individual risk profile, pain management should not only aim at pain relief, but also allow for improvement in quality of sleep, functionality, and general quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetic polyneuropathy; Diagnosis; Guidelines; Neuropathic pain; Screening; Treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34547367 DOI: 10.1016/j.diabres.2021.109063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Res Clin Pract ISSN: 0168-8227 Impact factor: 5.602