医学
颈部疼痛
物理疗法
剧痛
社会心理的
焦虑
萧条(经济学)
慢性疼痛
转移性疼痛
背痛
中枢敏化
病因学
伤害
物理医学与康复
内科学
精神科
病理
替代医学
经济
受体
宏观经济学
作者
Howard Schubiner,William J. Lowry,Marjorie Heule,Yoni K. Ashar,Michael Lim,Steven Mekaru,Torran C Kitts,Mark A. Lumley
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jpain.2023.09.019
摘要
Chronic back/neck pain (CBNP) can be primary (nociplastic or neuroplastic; without clear peripheral etiology) or secondary (to nociceptive or neuropathic causes). Expanding on available models of nociplastic pain, we developed a clinic-ready approach to diagnose primary/nociplastic pain: first a standard physical exam and review of imaging to rule out secondary pain; and second, a detailed history of symptom presentation to rule in primary pain. We trained a physician who evaluated 222 patients (73.9% female, age M = 59.6) with CBNP; patients separately completed pain and psychosocial questionnaires. We estimated the prevalence of primary CBNP and explored biomedical, imaging, and psychological correlates of primary CBNP. Although almost all patients (97.7%) had at least one spinal anomaly on imaging, the diagnostic approach estimated that 88.3% of patients had primary pain, 5.0% had secondary pain, and 6.8% had mixed pain. Patients with primary pain were more likely than the other two groups of patients (combined as “non-primary pain”) to report certain functional conditions, central sensitization, and features such as sensitivity to light touch, spreading pain, and pain worsening with stress; however, no difference was detected in depression, anxiety, and pain catastrophizing between those with primary and non-primary pain. These findings are consistent with prior estimates that 85 to 90% of CBNP is “nonspecific.” Further research is needed to validate and perhaps refine this diagnostic approach, which holds the potential for better outcomes if patients are offered treatments targeted to primary pain, such as pain neuroscience education and several emerging psychological therapies. Perspective We developed an approach to diagnose chronic primary pain, which was applied in a physiatry clinic to 222 patients with chronic back/neck pain. Most patients (88.3%) had primary pain, despite almost universal anomalies on spinal imaging. This diagnostic approach can guide educational and psychological treatments tailored for primary pain.
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