3.8 Article

Cold allodynia is correlated to paroxysmal and evoked mechanical pain in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)

Journal

SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PAIN
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages 533-542

Publisher

WALTER DE GRUYTER GMBH
DOI: 10.1515/sjpain-2021-0208

Keywords

cold allodynia; complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS); hyperexcitability; paroxysmal pain; quantitative sensory testing (QST); small fiber degeneration (SFD)

Funding

  1. University of Oslo

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This study aimed to investigate the differences in pain characteristics among subgroups of CRPS patients based on quantitative sensory testing (QST) results. Three subgroups were identified based on thermal thresholds, and the presence of thermal allodynia was associated with a higher prevalence of paroxysmal pain. The study suggests that cold allodynia may be related to hyper-excitability of superficial skin nociceptors, and small fiber degeneration alone may not explain the pain mechanism in CRPS.
Objectives: Mechanisms of complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) are still debated. Identifying subgroups of patients have been attempted in the hope of linking clinical findings to possible mechanisms. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether subgroups of CRPS (based on quantitative sensory testing (QST)-results) differed with respect to different characteristics of pain like spontaneous ongoing or paroxysmal pain and mechanical dynamic allodynia. Methods: 61 CRPS-patients (type 1 and 2) were examined clinically and with QST, in affected and contralateral extremity, with assessment of thresholds for warmth, cold and heat-and cold pain. Results: 43 patients (20 men, 23 men) were diagnosed with CRPS 1 (70.5%) and 18 patients (8 women and 10 men) with CRPS 2 (29.5%). Three subgroups were defined based on thermal thresholds; A (thermal allodynia 22.9%), B (thermal hyposensitivity 37.3%), C (thermal allodynia and hyposensitivity 39.3%). Paroxysmal pain was more prevalent in patients with thermal allodynia (merging group A + C, 25/38-65.8%) compared to patients without thermal allodynia (group B, 5/23-21.7%) (p-value=0.000 85). Conclusions: We suggest that cold allodynia is based on hyper-excitability of very superficial skin nociceptors. The correlation between paroxysmal pain, allodynia to light touch and cold allodynia suggests that activity in those peripheral nociceptors can drive both, paroxysmal pain and spinal sensitization leading to stroke evoked allodynia. Mechanistically, the physical cold stimulus can unmask disease-related hyperexcitability by closure of temperature-sensitive potassium channels or induction of resurgent currents. Small fiber degeneration alone may not be the crucial mechanism in CRPS, nor explain pain.

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