|
Complex Regional Pain
Syndrome
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic pain condition. The key symptom of CRPS
is continuous, intense pain out of proportion to the severity of the injury, which gets worse
rather than better over time. CRPS most often affects one of the arms, legs, hands, or feet.
Often the pain spreads to include the entire arm or leg.
Typical features include dramatic changes in the color and temperature of the skin over the
affected limb or body part, accompanied by intense burning pain, skin sensitivity, sweating, and
swelling.
In some cases the sympathetic nervous system plays an important role in sustaining the
pain. Another theory is that CRPS is caused by a triggering of the immune response, which
leads to the characteristic inflammatory symptoms of redness, warmth, and swelling in the affected
area.
Because there is no cure for CRPS, treatment is aimed at relieving painful symptoms.
Doctors may prescribe topical analgesics, antidepressants, corticosteroids, and opioids to relieve
pain. However, no single drug or combination of drugs has produced consistent long-lasting
improvement in symptoms.
Other treatments may include physical therapy, sympathetic nerve block, spinal cord stimulation,
and intrathecal drug pumps to deliver opioids and local anesthetic agents via the spinal cord.
The prognosis for CRPS varies from person to person. Spontaneous remission from symptoms occurs
in certain individuals. Others can have unremitting pain and crippling, irreversible changes
in spite of treatment.
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) and other institutes of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) conduct research relating to CRPS in laboratories at the NIH
and also support additional research through grants to major medical institutions across the
country. NINDS-supported scientists are studying new approaches to treat CRPS and intervene
more aggressively after traumatic injury to lower the chances of developing the disorder.
If you believe your complex regional pain syndrome was caused, or aggravated by, an accident,
including car accident, vehicle accident, highway accident, or other traffic accident, which
resulted from another's negligence, then contact our Florida injury
attorneys today for a free, confidential consultation about your accident claim.
|