Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain

Chronic neuropathic pain is often considered to be a common complication of injury to the central or peripheral nervous system and the pain itself is usually assumed to be intractable. Both of these assumptions are inaccurate. For example, numbness and tingling in glove and stocking distribution...

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Main Author: Dwight Moulin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2003-01-01
Series:Pain Research and Management
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2003/749572
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author Dwight Moulin
author_facet Dwight Moulin
author_sort Dwight Moulin
collection DOAJ
description Chronic neuropathic pain is often considered to be a common complication of injury to the central or peripheral nervous system and the pain itself is usually assumed to be intractable. Both of these assumptions are inaccurate. For example, numbness and tingling in glove and stocking distribution are common accompaniments of longstanding diabetes mellitus, but only about 10% of patients with diabetic neuropathy consider these sensory changes to be painful (1). Anticonvulsant and antidepressant treatments provide effective analgesia in up to 50% of patients with chronic neuropathic pain (2) and there is a growing body of high-quality evidence that controlled-release opioid analgesics provide substantial pain relief in a further subset of patients (3-6). Even with polypharmacy, this still leaves perhaps 20% to 30% of chronic neuropathic pain sufferers lacking adequate analgesia, and side effects can be problematic. In addition, central pain appears to be more refractory to opioid treatment than pain due to peripheral nerve injury (7).
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spelling doaj-art-3a120f4c626040bdb3632c000ca598f82025-02-03T01:29:14ZengWileyPain Research and Management1203-67652003-01-018313113210.1155/2003/749572Use of Methadone for Neuropathic PainDwight Moulin0Department of Clinical Neurological Sciences and Oncology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, CanadaChronic neuropathic pain is often considered to be a common complication of injury to the central or peripheral nervous system and the pain itself is usually assumed to be intractable. Both of these assumptions are inaccurate. For example, numbness and tingling in glove and stocking distribution are common accompaniments of longstanding diabetes mellitus, but only about 10% of patients with diabetic neuropathy consider these sensory changes to be painful (1). Anticonvulsant and antidepressant treatments provide effective analgesia in up to 50% of patients with chronic neuropathic pain (2) and there is a growing body of high-quality evidence that controlled-release opioid analgesics provide substantial pain relief in a further subset of patients (3-6). Even with polypharmacy, this still leaves perhaps 20% to 30% of chronic neuropathic pain sufferers lacking adequate analgesia, and side effects can be problematic. In addition, central pain appears to be more refractory to opioid treatment than pain due to peripheral nerve injury (7).http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2003/749572
spellingShingle Dwight Moulin
Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
Pain Research and Management
title Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
title_full Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
title_fullStr Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
title_full_unstemmed Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
title_short Use of Methadone for Neuropathic Pain
title_sort use of methadone for neuropathic pain
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2003/749572
work_keys_str_mv AT dwightmoulin useofmethadoneforneuropathicpain