1 / 31

The Brain in Pain Cortical contributions to Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

The Brain in Pain Cortical contributions to Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. Dr Janet Bultitude. Overview. Cognitive and cortical changes in CRPS Possible role in clinical symptoms Implications for treatment Proposed mechanisms. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome.

tommy
Download Presentation

The Brain in Pain Cortical contributions to Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Brain in PainCortical contributions to Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Dr Janet Bultitude

  2. Overview • Cognitive and cortical changes in CRPS • Possible role in clinical symptoms • Implications for treatment • Proposed mechanisms

  3. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

  4. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome “As the pain increases, the general sympathy becomes more marked. The temper changes and grows irritable, the face becomes anxious, and has a look of weariness and suffering. The sleep is restless, and the constitutional condition, reacting on the wounded limb, exasperates the hyperaesthetic state, so that the rattling of a newspaper, a breath of air…the vibrations caused by a military band, or the shock of the feet in walking, gives rise to increase of pain.” Silas Weir Mitchel, 1864

  5. Distorted body representation Lewis et al., 2010, Pain

  6. Distorted body representation • “I feel disgust, I know it sounds a very strong word to use but I’m disgusted that my arm is this way.” • “It was just like this foreign body you were carrying around with you cause it didn’t feel like it was part of you.” Lewis et al., 2007, Pain

  7. Distorted body representation • Difficulty locating / moving the limb unless directly looking at it • Difficulty identifying fingers from touch • Referred pain, or pain when viewing an object approaching the limb • Movement-induced pain greater when viewing hand through magnifying lens, less when viewing hand through minimising lens.

  8. Cortical reorganisation Maihöfner et al., 2004, Neurology

  9. Cortical reorganisation Gieteling et al., 2008, Pain

  10. Mechanisms of CRPS

  11. “When our senses present us with discordant information, such as when our eyes give our brain information that does not agree with our senses of body position, balance, and equilibrium, we feel nausea. Less familiar is the notion that discordance between awareness of motor intention, muscle and joint proprioception, and vision may result in our feeling pain.” 1999, The Lancet

  12. Poke your eye

  13. Predictive signal True sensory outcome

  14. ? ? ? Predictive signal True sensory outcome

  15. Implications for treatment

  16. ? ? ? Healthy hand representation Predictive signal True sensory outcome

  17. Healthy hand representation Predictive signal True sensory outcome

  18. ? ? ? Predictive signal True sensory outcome

  19. Prism adaptation

  20. Prism adaptation Sumitani et al., 2007, Neurology

  21. Prism adaptation

  22. Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation

  23. Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Antal et al., 2010; The Clinical Journal of Pain

  24. Proposed mechanisms

  25. Immobilization-driven reorganisation? Immobilized IF Healthy IF Lissek et al., 2004, Current Biology

  26. Direct immune mechanisms?

  27. Overview • Cognitive and cortical changes in CRPS • Possible role in clinical symptoms • Implications for treatment • Proposed mechanisms

  28. Take-home messages Cortical origins to pain ≠ It’s all just in your head

  29. Take-home messages • Importance of: • Early recognition • Aggressive intervention • Multiple simultaneous approaches • Cognitively- and cortically-targeted treatments

  30. Now recruiting We are looking for volunteers with CRPS for a study investigating two potential treatments that target cognitive and cortical changes. Interested patients can contact me at crps@fmrib.ox.ac.uk or jbultitude@fmrib.ox.ac.uk

More Related