What is neuropathic pain?
Neuropathic pain is pain caused by injury to or
deterioration of nerves.
How does it occur?
Neuropathic pain can be caused by:
- inflammation
- infections such as shingles (herpes zoster virus) or
malaria
- cancer chemotherapy
- radiation therapy
- surgery
- nerve compression from tumors
- irritation of the spinal nerves (such as by a bulging or
herniated disk)
- diseases such as diabetes, thyroid conditions, pernicious
anemia, or folic acid deficiency
- deterioration of the nerves themselves due to aging or
hereditary conditions
- brain injury, such as a stroke.
What are the symptoms?
Neuropathic pain feels different from most other types of
pain. It is often described as sharp, stabbing, burning, or
like an electric shock. It may be worse at night. The pain
may be constant after a stroke or if you have diabetic
neuropathy of the feet and legs. The pain may come and go
if you have trigeminal neuralgia or sciatic pain with
walking.
The kinds of neuropathic pain include:
- Allodynia. This is pain due to something that does not
usually cause pain such as a breeze blowing across your
arm, or a sheet rubbing up against a leg.
- Hyperalgesia. This is an increased or overly painful
response such as bumping an arm and feeling like a
searing iron touched it.
- Dysesthesia. This is uncomfortable feelings without
true pain such as pins and needles, feeling like your
feet are swollen or very fat, or like worms are crawling
on your skin.
How is it diagnosed?
Your health care provider will ask about your symptoms and
medical history. He or she will examine you. Tests such as
x-rays, blood tests, scans, and nerve conduction tests may
be done to try to identify the specific cause of the pain.
Your health care provider may also refer you to a
neurologist, neurosurgeon, or physiatrist for additional
testing.
How is it treated?
Nonprescription and prescription pain medicines can
sometimes work well for neuropathic pain. If these
medicines do not work well for you, your health care
provider may prescribe antidepressants and antiseizure
medicines that interfere with pain signals to the brain.
They may be used alone or with other drugs even if you are
not depressed or having seizures. These medicines take days
or weeks to work, so you must take the medicine every day on
a set schedule to reduce the pain. These medicines rarely
take away the pain completely, but they can help reduce it
to a level you can tolerate.
Other treatments may include:
- massage
- heat applied to the painful area
- cold applied to the painful area
- biofeedback (a method of controlling your body's
responses with your mind)
- electronic nerve stimulation devices
- topical (applied to the skin) anesthetic patches such as
menthol (without prescription) or lidocaine (prescription
needed)
- acupressure or acupuncture
- shots of local anesthetics, steroids, or other
chemicals to block pain signals or decrease inflammation
- surgery.
Injection of drugs into or around the nerve can deaden the
nerve, providing pain relief that is sometimes temporary and
sometimes permanent. However, this may result in numbness
in the area where the pain used to be. Injection of drugs
such as steroids to reduce inflammation may also be done.
If medicine does not help your pain, your provider will
most likely refer you to a pain specialist or pain clinic.
For some types of neuropathic pain, surgery may be considered to
remove the root of the nerve. These include electrosurgery,
microsurgery, and radio wave surgery.


Disclaimer: This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information provided is intended to be informative and educational and is not a
replacement for professional medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
HIA File BRN3422F.HTM Release 9.0/2006. Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subdiaries. All Rights Reserved.
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