Neuropathic pain after thoracotomy: Tracking signs and symptoms before and at monthly intervals following surgery
Background As the development of neuropathic symptoms contributes to pain severity and chronification after surgery, their early prediction is important to allow targeted treatment. Objectives We longitudinally investigated trajectories of signs and symptoms in patients undergoing thoracotomy and as...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of pain 2020-08, Vol.24 (7), p.1269-1289 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
As the development of neuropathic symptoms contributes to pain severity and chronification after surgery, their early prediction is important to allow targeted treatment.
Objectives
We longitudinally investigated trajectories of signs and symptoms in patients undergoing thoracotomy and assessed whether and at which time they were related to the development of neuropathic pain symptoms 6 months after surgery.
Methods
Presurgical and 6 monthly postsurgical assessments included questionnaires for mental and physical well‐being (e.g., depression/anxiety, pain catastrophizing, sleep quality, neuropathic pain symptoms), and quantitative sensory testing (QST).
Results
QST trajectories indicated nerve impairment of the surgery site with predominant loss of function. Signs of recovery towards the end of the assessment period were observed for some tests. Unsupervised cluster analysis with NPSI scores 6 months after surgery as clustering variable identified one group with no/low levels of neuropathic symptoms and one with moderate levels. The two groups differed w.r.t. several signs and symptoms already at early time points. Notably, neuropathic pain anywhere in the body differed already preoperatively and sleep impairment differentiated the two groups at all time points. Regression analysis revealed three factors that seemed particularly suited to predicted 6 months NPSI scores, namely preoperative neuropathic pain symptoms, with contributions from sleep impairment 1 month after surgery and the presence of dynamic mechanical allodynia 3 months after surgery.
Conclusions
Clinical routine should focus on the individual's physiological state, including pre‐existing neuropathic pain and sleep quality to identify patients early who might be at risk to develop chronic post‐surgical neuropathic pain.
Significance
Development of neuropathies contributes to pain severity and pain chronification after surgery. Here we demonstrate trajectories of quantitative sensory tests (assessed at monthly intervals for 6 months after surgery) that reveal accurate time courses of gain/loss of nerve function following thoracotomy. Independent of the degree of neuropathic signs after surgery, the main predictors for post‐surgical neuropathic pain are self‐reported neuropathic pain before surgery and sleep quality shortly after surgery. |
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ISSN: | 1090-3801 1532-2149 |
DOI: | 10.1002/ejp.1569 |