Donner B, Dertwinkel R, Zenz M, Schulte-Adams M, Weiss T. Long-term effects of nerve blocks in chronic pain.
Curr Opin Anaesthesiol 1998;
11:523-32. [PMID:
17013269 DOI:
10.1097/00001503-199810000-00014]
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Abstract
Regional blockade techniques have been of crucial importance for decades in chronic pain therapy, but in recent years some developments have made a new definition of the status of invasive procedures necessary. The realization of chronic pain as a multifactorial process led to the establishment of an interdisciplinary approach to pain therapy, leaving blockades as only one step in a multimodal therapy. The mainstay of local anaesthetic blocks now is diagnostic and prognostic, but correct interpretation of the results is limited by different factors, and controlled studies on the diagnostic value of local anaesthetic blockade are lacking. In cancer pain, invasive procedures are necessary in only a few cases. Some neuroablative techniques can offer long-term pain reduction. In non-cancer pain, neurodestructive procedures should be reserved for some special indications (e.g. lumbar sympathetic neurolytic blocks in ischaemic diseases). In a great number of chronic pain conditions the sympathetic nervous system is involved or even has a central status. In the acute stage of these diseases sympathetic blockades can be the therapy of choice. There is no disease in which different invasive procedures are performed so frequently and so uncritically as in chronic low back pain. Up to now, however, all controlled studies of invasive procedures only demonstrated short-term effects and failed to prove long-term efficacy. Therefore any invasive technique should only be performed in well-selected patients over a defined period and with a limited number of blockades.
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