医学
神经康复
物理医学与康复
痴呆
物理疗法
疾病
康复
内科学
作者
Michelangelo Bartolo,Adriano Chiò,Sérgio Ferrari,Cristina Tassorelli,Stefano Tamburin,Micol Avenali,Eva Azicnuda,Andrea Calvo,Augusto Caraceni,Giovanni Defazio,Roberto De Icco,Rita Formisano,Simone Franzoni,Elena Greco,I. Jedrychowska,Francesca Magrinelli,Umberto Manera,Enrico Marchioni,Sara Mariotto,Salvatore Monaco,Andrea Pace,Donatella Saviola,Isabella Springhetti,Michèle Tinazzi,Antonio De Tanti
出处
期刊:PubMed
日期:2016-12-01
卷期号:52 (6): 841-854
被引量:19
摘要
Pain is an important non-motor symptom in several neurological diseases, such as Parkinson's disease, cervical dystonia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, severe acquired brain injury, disorders of consciousness and dementia, as well as in oncology and neuroinfectivology. To overcome the lack of evidence-based data on pain management in these diseases, the Italian Consensus Conference on Pain in Neurorehabilitation (ICCPN) has defined criteria for good clinical practice among Italian neurorehabilitation professionals. Here a review of the literature (PubMed, EMBASE and gray literature) on pain characteristics, treatment and impact of pain in a neurorehabilitation setting is provided. Despite the heterogeneity of data, a consensus was reached on pain management for patients with these diseases: it is an approach originating from an analysis of the available data on pain characteristics in each disease, the evolution of pain in relation to the natural course of the disease and the impact of pain on the overall process of rehabilitation. There was unanimous consensus regarding the utility of a multidisciplinary approach to pain therapy, combining the benefits of pharmacological therapy with the techniques of physiotherapy and neurorehabilitation for all the conditions considered. While some treatments could be different depending on pathology, a progressive approach to the pharmacological treatment of pain is advisable, starting with non-opioid analgesics (paracetamol) and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as a first-line treatment, and opioid analgesics as a second-line treatment. In cases of pain secondary to spasticity, botulinum neurotoxin, and, in some cases, intrathecal baclofen infusion should be considered. Randomized controlled trials and prospective multicenter studies aimed at documenting the efficacy of pain treatment and their risk-benefit profile are recommended for these conditions.