Chapter 52 Postamputation Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Amputation of a limb can lead to painful and nonpainful

sequelae such as

A

phantom sensations, telescoping, residual

limb (aka “stump”) pain, and phantom pain

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2
Q

Reasons for Amputation

A

Vascular disease is responsible for approximately 77% of
major limb amputations, while trauma (21%) and cancer (2%) are less frequent causes. Among upper extremity amputees, trauma is the leading cause.

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3
Q

Phantom sensations

A

by definition nonpainful physical perceptions that occur after a traumatic or surgical amputation
that is perceived as emanating from the missing body part

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4
Q

Phantom sensations are common after

A

surgery,
with an incidence of 90% during the first 6 months.
A third of patients experience phantom sensations within
24 hr after their surgery

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5
Q

Is Excision of a body part essential for phantom sensations?

A

Excision of a body part,

is not essential for phantom sensations

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6
Q

Nonpainful phantom sensation may have various manifestations

including

A

kinetic sensations, and kinesthetic and

exteroceptive perceptions.

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7
Q

Kinetic sensations are exemplified by

A

perception of movements in the amputated body region, such as flexion/extension of the toes

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8
Q

Kinesthetic

perceptions are characterized by

A

distorted representations
in size or position of the missing body part (e.g., feeling
that the hand or foot is twisted).

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9
Q

Exteroceptive perceptions can include

A

paresthesias, tingling, touch, pressure,

itching, heat, cold, and wetness

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10
Q

Phantom sensations are commonly experienced

A

the distal portion of the limbs—hands and feet—possibly due to the rich innervation of these regions and the disproportionately large cortical representation of these regions in the homunculus.

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11
Q

TELESCOPING

A

the perception of progressive shortening
of the phantom body part resulting in the sensation that
the distal part of the limb is becoming more proximal

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12
Q

PHANTOM PAIN

A

the perception of a painful, unpleasant

sensation in the distribution of the missing or deafferentated body part.

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13
Q

Phantom pain can vary in character, duration, frequency, and

intensity

A

It can present as sharp, dull, burning, squeezing,
cramping, shooting, or as a shock-like electrical sensation. Patients may occasionally complain of intermittent tremors or painful muscle spasms in the stump associated with paroxysms of phantom pain.

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14
Q

phantom pain often changed in presentation

within the first 6 months after amputation

A

The characteristic
of the phantom pain changed from a mainly
exteroceptive-like pain (knife-like or sticking), localized in the entire limb or at least involving proximal parts of
the lost limb, to a mainly proprioceptive type of pain (squeezing or burning) localized in the distal parts of the amputated limb

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15
Q

One factor that increases the incidence of

phantom pain after amputation is

A

the presence of pain in

the limb before the amputation

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16
Q

Stump pain or residual limb pain

A

pain localized to the

residual body part following amputation.

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17
Q

Stump pain

is often secondary to

A

local pathologic processes such as infection; lesions of the skin, soft tissue, or bone; heterotopic ossification (.50% in traumatic amputations); and local ischemia

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18
Q

Stump pain is often secondary to local pathologic processes

A

These processes can generally be classified into the following categories: postsurgical
nociceptive, neurogenic, prosthogenic, arthrogenic, ischemic,
referred (usually from the spine or joints), sympathetically
maintained, or abnormal stump tissue (e.g., adhesive scar tissue)

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19
Q

Stump pain can be localized to

A

superficial (localized to the scar region of the incision), felt deep in
the distal stump, or encompass the whole residual limb.

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20
Q

Stump pain can frequently be differentiated from phantom pain based on

A

the fact that it is classically provoked

or exacerbated by traction or pressure, which often occurs during the use of a prosthesis.

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21
Q

The management

of stump pain entails a

A

detailed history and physical exam that includes ensuring a proper fitting prosthesis

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22
Q

Arthrogenic and referred stump pains are usually secondary

to

A

abnormal gait and asymmetrically distributed weight bearing, resulting in excessive stress on adjacent joints and/or lumbosacral spine structures. This can
lead to bursitis, accelerated arthritis, sacroiliac joint disease,
discogenic and facetogenic pain, and lumbosacral
radiculopathy.

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23
Q

PHANTOM PHENOMENA AFTER

MASTECTOMY

A

Most of these phantom sensations are felt intermittently,
occurring once every 2 or 4 weeks. phantom pain is localized in the entire breast or around
the nipple

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24
Q

PHANTOM PHENOMENA AFTER
MASTECTOMY

The onset of phantom sensation and/or pain almost always occurs within

A

3 months of surgery, with most cases occurring within 1 month.

25
Q

the only way to distinguish between true “phantom” pain and other sources of postmastectomy pain (e.g., intercostal brachial
neuralgia, neuroma) may be via

A

a detailed history and

physical exam

26
Q

suggest

that phantom phenomena are the result of

A

interactions xbetween altered peripheral, spinal, and supraspinal mechanisms.

27
Q

Peripheral nerve damage during an

amputation initiates

A

axonal regeneration, resulting in a

neuroma.

28
Q

A positive Tinel’s sign

A

(tapping on the injured
nerve or neuroma leading to pain in the phantom limb or
stump) represents a classic feature on physical examination

29
Q

Afferent fibers in a neuroma develop

A

ectopic activity,

mechanical sensitivity, and chemosensitivity to catecholamines.

30
Q

ion channels regulation in phantom limp

A

Upregulation of voltage-sensitive sodium channels, downregulation of potassium channels, and expression of novel receptors in the neuroma alter the excitability of the affected neurons and increase afferent input.

31
Q

Injured neurons
can generate new, nonfunctional connections (ephaptic
cross-talk), resulting in

A

increased afferent input to the spinal cord. These changes may lead to spontaneous
pain, and explain the amplification in pain caused by emotional distress and/or exposure to cold that leads to increased sympathetic discharge and circulating catecholamines

32
Q

Treatment of of phantom pain

A

Total spinal anesthesia, cordotomy, cordectomy,
and spinal cord stimulation have at best yielded only modest
relief of phantom pain; in some cases spinal anesthesia
can precipitate the development or rekindling of phantom
pain that previously subsided

33
Q

Peripheral nerve injury leads to

A

deafferentation—
removal of afferent input to the dorsal column of the spinal cord—causing structural, neurochemical, and physiologic changes in central nervous system neurons. These changes result in functional alterations—plasticity—in
central neurons that lead to spontaneous pain signals which are transmitted centrally

34
Q

Peripheral sensory input

at the level of the spinal cord also has inhibitory effects on the central transmission of pain.

A

Changes in the dorsal horn and the loss of afferent input lead to decreased impulses
from brainstem reticular areas, which normally exert
inhibitory effects on sensory transmission.

35
Q

the absence of inhibitory effects of sensory input from the missing peripheral body part causes

A

increased autonomous
activity of dorsal horn neurons, in effect becoming “sensory
epileptic discharges”.

36
Q

The brain exhibits neuroplastic changes both in motor

and sensory cortices

A

Cortical representation can be altered so that painful and nonpainful sensations in the phantom are a perceptual correlate of reorganizational processes in the somatosensory cortex

37
Q

The first step in the management of stump pain is to

A

identify a specific etiology for the pain that can be the target for developing treatment strategy. The stump should be
carefully examined for a localized tender spot where a Tinel’s sign can be elicited suggestive of a neuroma. The
stump should also be examined for ulcers, potential sites of inflammation or bony abnormalities, evidence of ischemia, or recurrence in the case of malignancy.

38
Q

changes in

gait and altered body mechanics may result in

A

musculoskeletal
pain. Rehabilitation therapy to correct gait and postural compensations that result in arthritic or referred pain may be useful

39
Q

TENS

A

may be beneficial in 25% to

50% of patients with stump pain

40
Q

Medication management

will depend on

A

whether the pain is suspected to be of somatic or neuropathic origin. In the former case, (NSAIDs), (COX-2)
antagonists, and/or opioids may be indicated. Neuropathic
pain resulting from neuromas should be treated with adjuvant
analgesics such as tricyclic antidepressants (e.g., nortriptyline)
and anticonvulsants (e.g., gabapentin).

41
Q

Surgical therapies are indicated only when

A

a specific rectifiable pathology is identified. Protruding bone, bony
exostosis, wound infection, and poorly healed wounds are
clear indications for surgery.

42
Q

A neuroma under constant

pressure or near a joint resulting in

A

repeated traction may
be treated by excision of the neuroma and repositioning
the nerve ending in bone or muscle

43
Q

Selective nerve blocks of peripheral nerves may be useful as a

A

prognostic indicator of the success of excision

of the neuroma

44
Q

Dorsal root entry zone (DREZ) lesioning

A

has not been effective in patients with isolated

stump pain.

45
Q

initiated in the preamputation phase

A

In the case of surgical amputations, educating and counseling
the patient on the consequences of amputation, the
rehabilitation process, and the prosthetic options

46
Q

Numerous treatment

approaches have been attempted for phantom pain

A

a wide variety of medications, physical
therapy, psychological interventions such as cognitive behavioral
therapies, complementary and alternative therapies,
neurostimulation, and ablative procedures at various sites in the peripheral and central nervous systems.

47
Q

shown

to reduce phantom pain in the short term.

A

opioids, calcitonin, and ketamine

48
Q

First-line medication classes for the treatment of neuropathic pain
include

A

gabapentinoid anticonvulsants and antidepressants

49
Q

employed as add-on or individual therapy when first line treatment is ineffective

A

beta-blockers, neuroleptic agents, mexiletine, and capsaicin

50
Q

Treatment for cramping pain, stump movement disorders, or flexor spasticity

A

baclofen or clonazepam may be effective

51
Q

Opioid therapy

A

has been shown to provide

short-term relief of stump and phantom pains

52
Q

offer temporary relief with

no proven meaningful long-term benefits

A

Various physical modalities such as ultrasound, vibration,
TENS, and acupuncture. These therapies
rely on the gate control theory of pain transmission, which proposes that stimulation of large nerve fibers “closes the gate” and inhibits the transmission of pain
centrally

53
Q

Surgical interventions have not been shown to be of

significant benefit in phantom pain

A

Spinal cord stimulation
has been recommended to replace the loss of afferent input to the dorsal column and enhance the descending
inhibition of pain transmission.

54
Q

Psychological interventions for phantom pain include

A

hypnosis, biofeedback, cognitive and behavioral therapies,
and support groups. These interventions may facilitate
adaptation to a change in body image, adaptation
to chronic pain, and relief of grief and anger

55
Q

Mirror therapy

A

has been successfully used to alleviate phantom pain by exploiting the brain’s predilection for prioritizing visual stimuli over proprioceptive and somatosensory
input

56
Q

Mirror therapy approach

A

It involves strategically placing a mirror adjacent to the intact limb to give the illusion that the missing body part is present and can be purposefully moved. Because sensory experiences can be evoked by visual stimuli,
mirror therapy increases spinal motor and cortical excitability

57
Q

Educational efforts, usually done in conjunction with

psychological preparation, can also be beneficial when utilized in the

A

pre-amputation and postamputation periods.
These include early introduction and education regarding
the use of a prosthesis, information on the care and treatment
of the stump, and explanation of the rehabilitation process, which might include vocational retraining

58
Q

the optimal
treatment of postamputation pain entails a multimodal
approach that includes

A

possible preemptive analgesia, psychotherapy,
education and rehabilitation, polypharmacy,
and if indicated, procedural interventions.