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The
impact of neuropathic pain on health-related quality of life: review and
implications.
Jensen
MP, Chodroff
MJ, Dworkin
RH.
Department
of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine,
Seattle, WA 98195-6490, USA.
A
number of high-quality studies have recently been published that examine
the association between neuropathic pain and health-related quality of
life (HRQoL). The current review identified 52 such studies in patients
with six neuropathic pain conditions associated with lesions of either
the peripheral (postsurgical neuropathic pain associated with breast and
amputation surgery, postherpetic neuralgia, and painful diabetic
neuropathy) or central (poststroke pain, spinal cord injury pain,
multiple sclerosis pain) nervous system. The results provide strong
evidence that the presence and severity of neuropathic pain are
associated with greater impairments in a number of important HRQoL
domains. However, the evidence also indicates that this impact varies
somewhat as a function of the HRQoL domain being considered and that
different measures of HRQoL are differentially sensitive to the effects
of neuropathic pain. The findings have important implications for the
selection of HRQoL domains and measures to use in clinical trials and in
clinical research on HRQoL in persons with neuropathic pain and suggest
that a biopsychosocial (as opposed to a primarily biomedical) approach
would be appropriate for understanding and treating neuropathic pain.
PMID:
17420400 [PubMed - in process]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=17420400&itool=pubmed_DocSum |