4.4 Article

Impaired Hand Size Estimation in CRPS

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 1095-1101

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2011.05.001

Keywords

Complex regional pain syndrome; body schema; cortical reorganization; neuropathic pain; hand size

Funding

  1. German Research Network Neuropathic Pain Syndromes (German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, BMBF) and the German Research Foundation (DFG) [KFO 130]

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A triad of clinical symptoms, ie, autonomic, motor and sensory dysfunctions, characterizes complex regional pain syndromes (CRPS). Sensory dysfunction comprises sensory loss or spontaneous and stimulus-evoked pain. Furthermore, a disturbance in the body schema may occur. In the present study, patients with CRPS of the upper extremity and healthy controls estimated their hand sizes on the basis of expanded or compressed schematic drawings of hands. In patients with CRPS we found an impairment in accurate hand size estimation; patients estimated their own CRPS-affected hand to be larger than it actually was when measured objectively. Moreover, overestimation correlated significantly with disease duration, neglect score, and increase of two-point-discrimination-thresholds (TPDT) compared to the unaffected hand and to control subjects' estimations. In line with previous functional imaging studies in CRPS patients demonstrating changes in central somatotopic maps, we suggest an involvement of the central nervous system in this disruption of the body schema. Potential cortical areas may be the primary somatosensory and posterior parietal cortices, which have been proposed to play a critical role in integrating visuospatial information. Perspective: CRPS patients perceive their affected hand to be bigger than it is. The magnitude of this overestimation correlates with disease duration, decreased tactile thresholds, and neglect-score. Suggesting a disrupted body schema as the source of this impairment, our findings corroborate the current assumption of a CNS involvement in CRPS. (C) 2011 by the American Pain Society

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