Phentolamine sympathetic block in painful polyneuropathies
II. Further questioning of the concept of ‘sympathetically maintained pain’
Abstract
To test for the presence of “sympathetically maintained pain” (SMP), we administered placebo-controlled phentolamine sympathetic blocks to 14 patients with painful polyneuropathies. Six received IV infusion of saline for 30 minutes, followed by phentolamine (35 mg). In eight patients, the saline phase was followed by double-blind infusion of phentolamine or phenylephrine (500 μg), a second saline phase, and then the other active drug. We measured magnitudes of spontaneous pain and mechanical hyperalgesias on a 0-to-10 pain scale every 5 minutes and monitored sensory and sympathetic effects clinically and through quantitative thermotest and thermography. Five patients reported significant diminution of pain (> 50%), all in response to placebo. Neither phentolamine nor phenylephrine provided relief, although all patients had signs of physiologic abnormalities reputed to be determinants or predictors of SMP. These results complement previous studies demonstrating the nonexistence of SMP among “reflex sympathetic dystrophy” patients and further question the concept of SMP.
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© 1994 by the American Academy of Neurology.
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Published online: June 1, 1994
Published in print: June 1994
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