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Journal ArticleDOI

The incidence of complex regional pain syndrome: a population-based study.

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TLDR
The observed incidence rate of CRPS is more as four times higher than the incidence rate observed in the only other population‐based study, performed in Olmsted County, USA.
Abstract
The complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a painful disorder that can occur in an extremity after any type of injury, or even spontaneously. Data on the incidence of CRPS are scarce and mostly hospital based. Therefore the size of the problem and its burden on health care and society are unknown. The objective of the present study was to estimate the incidence of CRPS in the general population. A retrospective cohort study was conducted during 1996–2005 in the Integrated Primary Care Information (IPCI) project, a general practice research database with electronic patient record data from 600,000 patients throughout the Netherlands. Potential CRPS cases were identified by a sensitive search algorithm including synonyms and abbreviations for CRPS. Subsequently, cases were validated by electronic record review, supplemented with original specialist letters and information from an enquiry of general practitioners. The estimated overall incidence rate of CRPS was 26.2 per 100,000 person years (95% CI: 23.0–29.7). Females were affected at least three times more often than males (ratio: 3.4). The highest incidence occurred in females in the age category of 61–70 years. The upper extremity was affected more frequently than the lower extremity and a fracture was the most common precipitating event (44%). The observed incidence rate of CRPS is more as four times higher than the incidence rate observed in the only other population-based study, performed in Olmsted County, USA. Postmenopausal woman appeared to be at the highest risk for the development of CRPS. 2006 International Association for the Study of Pain. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Sex, Gender, and Pain: A Review of Recent Clinical and Experimental Findings

TL;DR: Current human findings regarding sex differences in experimental pain indicate greater pain sensitivity among females compared with males for most pain modalities, including more recently implemented clinically relevant pain models such as temporal summation of pain and intramuscular injection of algesic substances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical features and pathophysiology of complex regional pain syndrome

TL;DR: The evidence points to CRPS being a multifactorial disorder that is associated with an aberrant host response to tissue injury, and variation in susceptibility to perturbed regulation of any of the underlying biological pathways probably accounts for the clinical heterogeneity of CRPS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Complex regional pain syndrome

TL;DR: Major mechanism for CRPS symptoms, which might be present subsequently or in parallel during the course of CRPS, are trauma-related cytokine release, exaggerated neurogenic inflammation, sympathetically maintained pain and cortical reorganisation in response to chronic pain (neuroplasticity).
Journal ArticleDOI

Ketamine produces effective and long-term pain relief in patients with Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type 1.

TL;DR: In a population of mostly chronic CRPS‐1 patients with severe pain at baseline, a multiple day ketamine infusion resulted in significant pain relief without functional improvement.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

International Association for the Study of Pain: update on WHO-IASP activities.

TL;DR: The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) is a non-governmental organization (NGO) and has an official relationship with the World Health Organization (WHO).
Journal ArticleDOI

Signs and symptoms of reflex sympathetic dystrophy: prospective study of 829 patients.

TL;DR: Early symptoms of reflex sympathetic dystrophy are those of an inflammatory reaction and not of a disturbance of the sympathetic nervous system, and support the concept of an exaggerated regional inflammatory response to injury or operation in reflex sympathetic Dystrophy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reflex sympathetic dystrophy: changing concepts and taxonomy

TL;DR: A revised taxonomic system for disorders previously called reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) and causalgia is presented and these revised categories have been included in the 2nd edition of the IASP Classification of Chronic Pain Syndromes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Complex regional pain syndrome type I: incidence and prevalence in Olmsted county, a population-based study

TL;DR: CRPS I is of low prevalence, more commonly affects women than men, the upper more than the lower extremity, and three out of four cases undergo resolution, suggesting that invasive treatment of CRPS may not be warranted in the majority of cases.
Journal ArticleDOI

External validation of IASP diagnostic criteria for Complex Regional Pain Syndrome and proposed research diagnostic criteria

TL;DR: Current IASP criteria for CRPS have inadequate specificity and are likely to lead to overdiagnosis, and proposed modifications to these criteria substantially improve their external validity and merit further evaluation.
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