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By Brinder Bhogal and Charmikha Sivakumaran
PHANTOM LIMB PAIN
• Phantom pain is pain that feels like it's coming from a body part that's no longer there
• Following traumatic amputation of a limb, many patients report feeling tingling, pins-and-needles, burning, or a stabbing pain
where their limb used to be • A common description of the pain is of a limb being in a
hyperextended or unnatural posture• Phantom pain often resembles the type of pain experienced before
amputation • 4 out of 5 people who lose limbs suffer from phantom limb pain• Anesthetic blocks applied to the nerves at the stump have failed to
eliminate this pain in some individuals• Physical therapy techniques rarely help • Many resort to morphine-like drugs
WHAT IS PHANTOM LIMB PAIN?
• Unknown • Brain or spinal cord?
• PNS
• Severed nerves send occasional pain messages back to the brain
• neuromas grow out of injured nerve fibers that continue to give off pain impulses
• CNS
• Non-functional sensory cortex becomes overpowered by functional areas of the brain
CAUSES
• Most people who’ve had a limb removed report that it sometimes feels as if their amputated limb is still there • This can also occur in people who were born without
limbs • Characteristics of phantom pain include:
1. Onset within the first few days of amputation
2. Tendency to come and go rather than be constant
3. Usually affects the part of the limb farthest from the body
4. May be shooting, stabbing, squeezing, throbbing or burning pain
5. Sometimes feels as if the phantom part is forced into an uncomfortable position
6. Weather changes, pressure, emotional stress can influence pain
SYMPTOMS
Some factors that may increase risk of phantom pain include:
1. Pain before amputation: some researchers have found that people who had pain in a limb before amputation
are likely to have it afterward. This may be because the brain holds on to the memory of the pain and keeps
sending pain signals, even after the limb is removed.
2. Stump pain: people who have persistent stump pain, usually have phantom pain too. Stump pain can be caused by an abnormal growth on damaged nerve
endings.
3. Poor-fitting artificial limb
RISK FACTORS
1. Write down the symptoms, when they first occurred, how often they occur, triggers
2. Make a list of key medical information , other conditions, names of medications
THINGS TO DO
• Although there's no medical test to diagnose phantom pain, doctors can identify the condition by collecting information about symptoms and the circumstances
(such as trauma or surgery) that occurred before the pain started.
• Describing your pain precisely can help the doctor. • Even though it's common to have phantom pain and
stump pain at the same time, treatments for these two problems may differ.
TESTS AND DIAGNOSIS
1. Antidepressants: tryciclic antidepressants often can relieve the pain caused by damaged nerves
(amitryptyline)
2. Anticonvulsants: epilepsy drugs (carbamazepine) can be used to treat nerve pain, they work by quieting damaged
nerves to slow or prevent uncontrolled pain signals.
3. Narcotics: opioids (codeine, morphine), may be an option, have to be taken in appropriate doses.
TREATMENTS AND DRUGS - MEDICATIONS
1. Nerve stimulation: In a procedure called transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), a device sends a weak electrical current via adhesive patches
on the skin near the area of pain. This may interrupt pain signals, preventing them from reaching your brain. Used properly, TENS is safe.
2. Electric artificial limb: A type of artificial limb called a myoelectric prosthesis has motors controlled by electrical signals that occur during voluntary muscle activation in the remaining limb. Using a myoelectric prosthesis may reduce
phantom pain.
3. Mirror box: This device contains mirrors that make it look like an amputated limb exists. The mirror box has two openings — one for the intact limb and one for the stump. The person then performs symmetrical exercises, while watching
the intact limb move and imagining that he or she is actually observing the missing limb moving.
4. Acupuncture: can be an effective treatment for some types of chronic pain. In acupuncture, the practitioner inserts extremely fine, sterilized stainless steel
needles into the skin at specific points on the body. It's thought that acupuncture stimulates your central nervous system to release the body's natural pain-
relieving endorphins. Acupuncture is generally considered safe when performed correctly.
TREATMENTS AND DRUGS – NON-INVASIVE THERAPY
1. Injections: pain-killing medications (LA, steroids)
2. Spinal cord stimulations: electrodes inserted along spinal cord, small electrical current delivered to the
spinal cord.
3. Intrathecal delivery system: medication is delivered directly into the spinal fluid.
TREATMENTS AND DRUGS – MINIMALLY INVASIVE
THERAPIES
1. Brain stimulation: Deep brain stimulation and motor cortex stimulation are similar to spinal cord stimulation except that the current is delivered within the brain. A
surgeon uses a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan to position the electrodes correctly. Although the data
are still limited, brain stimulation appears to be a promising option in selected individuals.
2. Stump revision or neurectomy: If phantom pain is triggered by nerve irritation in the stump, surgical resection or revision can sometimes be helpful. But
cutting nerves also carries the risk of making the pain worse.
TREATMENTS AND DRUGS - SURGERY
1. Look for distractions
2. Stay physically active
3. Take medications
4. Find ways to relax
5. Seek support of other people
6. Take care of the stump
OTHER WAYS OF PAIN MANAGEMENT