Skin biopsy and quantitative sensory testing do not predict response to lidocaine patch in painful neuropathies
- 14 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Muscle & Nerve
- Vol. 33 (1) , 42-48
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.20419
Abstract
Predictors of response to neuropathic pain treatment in patients with painful distal sensory neuropathies are lacking. The 5% lidocaine patch is believed to exert its effects on neuropathic pain via a local stabilizing effect on cutaneous sensory afferents. As such, it provides a model to assess whether the status of epidermal innervation as determined by skin biopsy or quantitative sensory testing (QST) of small‐ and large‐diameter sensory afferents might serve as predictors of response to topical, locally active treatment. In this study we assessed associations between epidermal nerve fiber (ENF) densities, sensory nerve conduction studies (NCS), QST, and response to a 5% lidocaine patch in patients with painful distal sensory neuropathies. We observed no association between distal leg epidermal and subepidermal innervation and response to the lidocaine patch. Several patients with complete loss of distal leg ENF showed a response to the lidocaine patch. Similarly we observed no consistent association between treatment response and QST for vibration, cooling, warm, heat‐pain, and cold‐pain thresholds, or distal sensory NCS. Thus, distal‐leg skin biopsy, QST, and sensory NCS cannot be used to identify patients with painful polyneuropathy likely to respond to a lidocaine patch in clinical practice. Further studies are required to clarify precisely the mechanism and site of action of the lidocaine patch in patients with peripheral neuropathic pain. Muscle Nerve, 2005Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- An Open-Label Study of the Lidocaine Patch 5% in Painful Idiopathic Sensory PolyneuropathyPain Medicine, 2005
- Therapeutic outcome in neuropathic pain: relationship to evidence of nervous system lesionEuropean Journal of Neurology, 2004
- Assessing function and pathology in familial dysautonomia: assessment of temperature perception, sweating and cutaneous innervationBrain, 2004
- Dissecting out mechanisms responsible for peripheral neuropathic pain: Implications for diagnosis and therapyLife Sciences, 2004
- Class of nerve fiber involvement in sensory neuropathies: Clinical characterization and utility of the plantar nerve action potentialMuscle & Nerve, 2002
- Clinical importance of changes in chronic pain intensity measured on an 11-point numerical pain rating scalePAIN®, 2001
- Do nerve growth factor-related mechanisms contribute to loss of cutaneous nociception in leprosy?Pain, 2000
- Lidocaine patch: double-blind controlled study of a new treatment method for post-herpetic neuralgiaPain, 1996
- The Analgesic Response to Intravenous Lidocaine in the Treatment of Neuropathic PainAnesthesia & Analgesia, 1996
- Ropivacaine and lidocaine inhibit proliferation of non-transformed cultured adult human fibroblasts, endothelial cells and keratinocytesInflammation Research, 1993