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Letters to the Editor to:
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- Scientific Articles:
David Ring, Daniel Guss, Leah Malhotra, and Jesse B. Jupiter
- Idiopathic Arm Pain
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2004; 86: 1387-1391
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
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Electronic letters published:
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Update on Patients with Idiopathic Arm Pain
- David Ring, M.D., J. Sebastiaan Souer, M.D.
(12 December 2006)
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Idiopathic Arm Pain
- Emin K Alpar, Vijay V. Killampalli
(12 October 2004)
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Dr. Ring responds:
- David Ring
(23 August 2004)
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"Idiopathic Arm Pain"
- Myron M. LaBan, Justin C. Riutta, M.D.
(17 August 2004)
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Update on Patients with Idiopathic Arm Pain |
12 December 2006 |
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David Ring, M.D., Orthopaedic Surgeon Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, J. Sebastiaan Souer, M.D.
Send letter to journal:
Re: Update on Patients with Idiopathic Arm Pain
dring{at}partners.org David Ring, M.D., et al.
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To The Editor:
Following publication of two papers regarding idiopathic arm
(nonspecific or medically unexplained arm pain) in The Journal of Bone and
Joint Surgery(1,2), I am often asked: “What happens to the patients that you
diagnose non-specifically? Do they eventually end up with a specific
diagnosis and treatment? Does their pain resolve?” In an attempt to answer
these questions we undertook a mail survey of 466 of my patients diagnosed
with idiopathic arm pain in 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 using an IRB-
approved protocol. After a series of 3 mailings we got 87 responses (19%).
Although this response rate was disappointing, there were no significant
differences between responders and nonresponders with regard to age,
gender, or zip code, and we believe the information obtained is of
interest.
Seventy percent of patients still had pain. Only 15% had obtained a
specific diagnosis including 3 arthritis, 2 thoracic outlet syndrome, 2
repetitive strain injury, 2 ganglions, and one each carpal tunnel
syndrome, trigger finger, and fibromyalgia. The majority of these
diagnoses can be disputed, either in the existence of the diagnosis or the
relationship of this diagnosis to vague, diffuse, arm pains. Only 3
patients had had surgery including 1 first rib resection, 1 ganglion
excision, and one “partial carpectomy”.
Forty-six percent of patients felt that I had done my best for them.
Fourteen percent of patients made positive comments regarding me
personally including, “caring doctor”, “kept me from surgery”, and
“scheduled follow-up”. Sixty-two percent of patients made a negative
comment, including: “too much emphasis on the psychological over the
physical”, “should order more tests”, “failed to identify the problem”,
“didn’t operate on me”, “no cure”, and criticism of my behavior.
In my opinion, these survey data support the existence of chronic,
nonspecific, medically unexplained arm pains. The majority of patients had
persistent, undiagnosed pain, and continued to resent me specifically, and
the medical profession in general, for not being able to solve their
problem. Many of these patients were also uncomfortable with the manner in
which I discussed the psychosocial influences on their illness. While I
have made great efforts to improve in this, I have also called on the
experts.
Building on the successful use of cognitive behavioral therapy in
other chronic, nonspecific pain contexts, my colleagues and I have
established a Multidisciplinary Arm Pain Program as part of the MGH
Orthoapedic Hand and Upper Extremity service. Our team includes a non-
operative musculoskeletal doctor (physiatrist), hand therapists, surgeons,
and psychologists that specialize in cognitive behavioral therapy. A
survey study recently published in the Journal of Hand Surgery suggested
that most patients are receptive to considering the psychosocial aspects
of their illness. My impression is that patients with idiopathic arm pain
may be more reluctant than the average patient to consider psychological
treatment, likely because they are guarded about the possibility that
their problem is a somatoform disorder, and because psychological
diagnoses and psychological treatments are often stigmatized in our
society. In spite of these challenges, we are having substantial success
and have developed effective relationships with many patients. I encourage
the development of programs that give hope to patients with vague,
diffuse, puzzling chronic arm pains. I strongly discourage the
indiscriminant use of diagnoses and treatments of questionable validity.
In support of their research for or preparation of this work, one or more of the authors received, in any one year, outside funding or grants in excess of $10,000 from AO Foundation, Wright Medical, Biomet, Smith and Nephew, Small Bone Innovations. Neither they nor a member of their immediate families received payments or other benefits or a commitment or agreement to provide such benefits from a commercial entity. No commercial entity paid or directed, or agreed to pay or direct, any benefits to any research fund, foundation, division, center, clinical practice, or other charitable or nonprofit organization with which the authors, or a member of their immediate families, are affiliated or associated.
References:
1. Ring D, Kadzielski J, Malhotra L, Lee SGP, Jupiter JB. Psychological factors associated with idiopathic arm pain. J Bone Surg Am. 2005;87:374-380.
2. Ring D, Guss D, Malhotra L, Jupiter JB. Idiopathic arm pain. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2004;86:1387-1391. |
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Idiopathic Arm Pain |
12 October 2004 |
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Emin K Alpar, Consultant Trauma & Orthopaedic Surgeon Birmingham Nuffield Hospital, Vijay V. Killampalli
Send letter to journal:
Re: Idiopathic Arm Pain
vijayortho{at}email.com Emin K Alpar, et al.
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Dear Editor
We read the paper ‘Idiopathic arm pain’ by Ring et al1. They have
stated that 14 percent of patients diagnosed with idiopathic arm pain
symptoms did not fit a characteristic or anatomically meaningful pattern.
Many patients with shoulder, arm and elbow pain suffer from atypical
carpal tunnel syndrome (ACTS)2. Although we have described this after
whiplash injury, it is also frequently seen in industrial injuries, falls,
lifting and pulling injuries and after successfully treated upper
extremity fractures and shoulder dislocations. In industrial injuries the
mechanism of injury is always regarded as ‘minor trauma’ and patients are
sent for many unnecessary investigations like CT scan, MRI scan, EMG’s
etc. These patients have global sensory changes in the affected upper
limbs, all median nerve innovated muscles in the forearm and the hand are
weak. Also since they cannot stabilise first CMC joint, there is also
weakness of EPL even though the radial nerve is intact. Five millilitres
of bupivacaine 0.25% injected around the median nerve at the wrist usually
temporarily relieves or decreases arm pain. The only laboratory finding
in these cases was post operative normalisation of serum neuropeptide
levels which are significantly elevated before the operation. However,
neuropeptide studies are still a research tool.
When hyperalgesia and allodynia is situated some distance from the
site of injured nerve such responses are often described as inappropriate
illness behaviour, but in fact represent behavioural mal-adjustments
rather than psychological problems.
Decompression of carpal tunnel (CTD), in 90 percent of these cases
are successful and the above mentioned clinical findings and pain
disappears along with trapezius spasm. The presence trapezius spasm
usually leads to erroneous diagnosis of fibro-myalgia. This muscle is
innervated by spinal accessory nerve but decompression of median nerve at
the wrist releases trapezius spasm suggest that there is some relation of
these two nerves dorsal horns.
When pain is treated successfully the psychological problem also
disappears. After the operation many sociological features remain the same
but pain disappears. Therefore, we disagree with Dr Ring et al, that
psychological and sociological features are reflecting strong influence in
the causation of so called idiopathic arm pain. Neural plasticity appears
to be the most credible explanation of chronic pain.
Sincerely
Emin Kaya Alpar
MD, MCh Orth, FRCS Eng, FRCS Ed Orth
Vijay Vardhan Killampalli
D.Orth, DNB Orth, MSc Trauma, MCh Orth
References:
1. Ring D, Guss D, Malhotra L, Jupiter JB. Idiopathic arm pain. J Bone
Joint Surg Am. 2004 Jul; 86-A(7):1387-91.
2. Alpar EK, Onuoha G, Killampalli VV, Waters R. Management of
chronic pain in whiplash injury. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2002 Aug; 84(6):807
-11.
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Dr. Ring responds: |
23 August 2004 |
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David Ring, Orthopaedic Surgeon Massachusetts General Hospital
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Ring responds:
dring{at}partners.org David Ring
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To the Editor:
Our paper has resulted in some very enjoyable and interesting
correspondence, most of it informal via email, phone, or in person. The
letter from Drs. Leban and Riutta is representative of the majority of
this correspondence.
First, they note the “absence” of a specific diagnosis that
they favor. We certainly saw patients with cervical radiculopathy in our
practices; however, in a hand surgeon’s office, this is not a common
complaint. As a result, it does not show up in the analysis. To other
readers of our article: if you don’t see your diagnosis it may be that it
was simply not diagnosed frequently enough to make the list. To quote
from the last sentence of the paragraph describing the patients with a
discrete diagnosis: “The remaining 2013 patients had multiple diagnoses,
bilateral diagnoses, or a less common discrete diagnosis.”
Secondly, they are concerned about giving “short-shrift to the
primary sensory complaints of pain and dysesthesias as being less than
objective”. In reply, it must be noted that pain and dysethesias are in
fact subjective. They are symptoms and not signs. There is no reliable
and valid test of pain or dysethesia. In fact, over the last 150 years, psychosomatic
complaints have gradually moved away from objectively verifiable
complaints such as paralysis and have found their way to the shelter of
complaints that cannot be objectively proved or disproved such as pain and
fatigue.(1) This is exactly our challenge.
If the magnitude of pain is out of
proportion to what would be expected from a cervical radiculopathy, or is not
in the distribution of a nerve root, and is not associated with any
objectively verifiable findings, then a diagnosis of cervical radiculopathy
cannot be substantiated. In our practices, when the patient’s complaints are
consistent with a cervical radiculopathy, that diagnosis is provisionally
applied and further addressed or investigated. When they are not, we
prefer the neutral and reassuring term “idiopathic arm pain” until a more
specific diagnosis can be objectively verified. We are comfortable with
the fact that a large percentage of pain goes unexplained and poorly
treated (headaches, backaches, irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia,
etc.).
Our primary responsibility to ensure that dangerous diseases are
not neglected and that reliable opportunities for treatment are not
overlooked. But the key is still to, “First, do no harm”. When it comes
to pain, inaccurate diagnoses have done far more harm than “missed”
diagnoses.(2) Pain is the most difficult thing to diagnose and treat.
A hypothesis must be testable or the concept
is not scientific. If it is not scientific, then it may be of limited
value. Drs. Leban and Riutta present a hypothesis that is testable
to some degree. First, the complaints and exam must fit the known anatomy
and physiology. Second, in the absence of any objective exam findings, a
discrete lesion consistent with the patient’s symptoms and at the expected
level on imaging studies is supportive. Finally, if the disease process
is treated and the symptoms resolve that is also supportive. But there
are traps at every stage and we must avoid fooling ourselves. We can lead
the patient and sculpt their complaints into what we want them to be (we
should use open-ended interviewing techniques and beware of our own
biases). We may over interpret relatively subtle findings on sensitive
imaging studies, many of which have been demonstrated to be age-related or
anatomical variations (we must order and interpret these tests with
caution). And, of course, there is the placebo effect that keeps us from
crediting the treatment too much until a scientific study (randomized
controlled trial) has demonstrated a strong beneficial effect.
No doubt about it, it is difficult to be scientific about subjective
complaints. Let’s keep trying and accept nothing less.
Sincerely,
David Ring, MD
References
1. Shorter E. From paralysis to fatigue. New York: The free press;
1992.
2. Malleson A. Whiplash and other useful illnesses. Montreal: McGill-
Queen's University Press; 2002. |
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"Idiopathic Arm Pain" |
17 August 2004 |
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Myron M. LaBan, M.D. William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan 48073, Justin C. Riutta, M.D.
Send letter to journal:
Re: "Idiopathic Arm Pain"
myjoy{at}comcast.net Myron M. LaBan, et al.
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To the Editor
Ring et al,(1) must be
complimented on their earnest effort to better understand the challenging
enigma of idiopathic arm pain. The authors classification of a “distinct diagnosis” was that of
an entity which must be substantiated by objective signs and pathology
which correlates with the patient’s symptoms, i.e., signs of motor
dysfunction. However, this arbitrary classification gives short-shrift to
the primary sensory complaints of pain and dysesthesias, as being less
than objective.
Relative to the frequency of upper extremity pain
complaints, this disregard of pain and dysesthesias as being non-objective
is both short sighted and potentially does a woeful disservice to the 3,888
patients in this study. Notable by its absence was that cervical
radiculopathy was not even considered as a presumptive cause of
“unilateral upper extremity pain,” although it is all too often a primary
cause and/or contributes to co-morbidity in a large number of upper extremity pain
complaints.
The seminal work of Frykholm (2), and that of Holt and Yates (3) showed that the neuroanatomy of the cervical nerve roots differs from that of the thoracic or lumbar levels. Frykholm found that in approximately half the number of cases there is
a distinct demarcation at the cervical neural foraminal levels between the
dorsal and ventral spinal roots which merge only distally at the level of the
dorsal root ganglia. Unlike the lumbar roots, this discrete separation of
the motor and sensory fibers at the neural foramen provides the possibility
for an isolated compromise of either the posterior or the anterior root
without the involvement of the other. The dorsal roots and their ganglion
are larger than ventral roots and lie in close proximity to the
zygapophyseal joints. Chronic irritation of these sensory roots due to
degenerative changes of the adjacent facet joints often leads to nerve
fiber degeneration at a much greater frequency than similar
histopathological involvement of the motor roots. In these instances,
pain and/or associated dysesthesias may be the preeminent symptoms without associated
motor correlate. Conversely, acute ventral root compromise by a
degenerative or herniated disc may present with a painless paresis in the
myotome distribution of the impaired root. However, with chronic
inflammation of the motor root pain may provoke distal myalgias in the
myotome distribution of the involved spinal root, i.e., a C7 radiculopathy
presenting as chest or breast pain (4) when referred to the pectoralis major
muscle. In the particular instance of cervical radiculopathy, other
authors have also noted that “the sensitivity of pain and paresthesia
symptoms [remains] high, while the sensitivity of neurological findings is
lower and highly variable.”(5)
Well recognized patterns of dermatomal and sclerotomal as well as
myotome sensory referral associated with cervical radiculopathy become
less subjective and more “objective” when the diagnostician is empowered
by a deeper understanding of the rather
unique pathophysiology of the cervical roots.
Sincerely, Myron M. LaBan, M.D.and Justin C. Riutta, M.D.
REFERENCES
1.Ring D, Guss D, Malhotra L, Jupiter JB. Idiopathic arm pain. J
Bone Joint Surg Am. 2004; 86:1387-91.
2.Frykholm R. Lower cervical nerve roots and their investments. Acta
Chir Scand. 1951; 101:457-71.
3.Holt S, Yates PO. Cervical spondylosis and nerve root lesions:
incidence at routine necropsy. J Bone Surg Br. 1966; 48:407-73.
4.LaBan, MM, Meerschaert JR, Taylor RS. Breast pain: a symptom of
cervical radiculopathy. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1979; 60:315-17.
5.Lauder, TD, Dillingham TR, Andary M, et al. Predicting
electrodiagnostic outcomes in patients with upper limb symptoms: are the
history and physical examination helpful? Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2000;
81:436-41. |
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