Articles: neuralgia.
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A 41-year-old female developed spontaneous burning pain (causalgia) and stimulus-induced dysesthesia (allodynia) of the dorso-lateral part of her right foot following trauma. An L3 and L4 sympathectomy eliminated the spontaneous burning pain for only 1 year, but did not affect the stimulus-induced dysesthesia. We evaluated her two years post-sympathectomy with grouped sequential anesthetic blocks and sensory testing. ⋯ When sural block was added to the peroneal block the stimulus-induced dysesthesia was eliminated, and sensation in the sural distribution was lost. We conclude that the sural distribution received overalapping innervation for touch and pin-prick perception, but that heat perception, burning pain and the stimulus-induced dysesthesia were sural nerve dependent. Further, we were able to dissociate causalgia pain from allodynia in this patient.
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We treated 72 patients, referred to a pain clinic for acute herpes zoster neuralgia, with local anesthetics administered by nerve block and infiltration. Only those patients with severe pain initially proved to be at risk for the development of chronic postherpetic neuralgia (defined as pain in the involved dermatomes lasting at least six months). Although local anesthetic injections effectively relieved the acute pain of active herpes zoster, they did not prevent the development of chronic postherpetic neuralgia.
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Genitofemoral neuralgia is a syndrome characterized by chronic pain and paresthesia in the region of genitofemoral nerve distribution. Genitofemoral nerve entrapment has been described after inguinal herniorrhaphy, appendectomy, and cesarean section. Failure to distinguish it from ilioinguinal nerve entrapment can result in unnecessary inguinal reexploration, or patients severely debilitated from chronic pain. ⋯ If this is unsuccessful in affecting relief of symptoms, a paravertebral block of L-1 and L-2 should be considered. Using these two blocks, a rational decision can then be made to operate on either the ilioinguinal nerve or the genitofemoral nerve. We describe three cases of genitofemoral neuralgia treated by extraperitoneal excision of the genitofemoral nerve.
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Six patients representing seven cases of spontaneous (nontraumatic) saphenous neuralgia secondary to entrapment of the nerve in the subsartorial canal are presented. All patients complained of medial knee and leg pain. Clinical findings included tenderness over the subsartorial canal and sensory changes in the cutaneous distribution of one or both terminal branches of the saphenous nerve. ⋯ All patients were treated operatively, which resulted in symptomatic improvement. All six patients initially underwent external neurolysis; however, three patients required saphenous neurectomy for recurrent symptoms. Saphenous neuralgia should be considered in the differential diagnosis of medial lower extremity pain.