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Healthcare
Management of chronic pain in children
George A Chalkiadis
MJA 2001; 175: 476-479 For editorial comment, see Collins et al.
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Objectives: To describe the demography, clinical
characteristics, treatment, functional limitations and outcomes
of patients referred to a paediatric multidisciplinary pain clinic.
Design: Prospective data collection, descriptive
study.
Patients and setting: Tertiary referral centre pain
clinic (Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne) over two years (March
1998 - March 2000).
Main outcome measures: Pain profile; functional
disability (school absenteeism, sleep disturbance and inability to
perform sport); treatments received; outcome.
Results: 207 patients (mean age, 13.1 years; 73%
females; 29% rural residents) were referred in the two years.
Concomitant medical conditions were present in 106/207 (51%)
patients, the commonest being cerebral palsy or spasticity (22
patients) and malignancy (18). Complex regional pain syndrome was
diagnosed in 44 patients. Functional disability due to pain included
school absenteeism (95% of school attenders), sleep disruption (71%
of all patients) and inability to perform sport (90% of those able to
participate in sport previously). Of the 105 patients who missed five
or more days of school because of pain, 93 attended school regularly
after treatment. Sleep disturbance improved in 129/146 (88%)
patients, and 129/147 (88%) resumed sporting activity after
multidisciplinary intervention. Outcome was classified as good in
134 patients (65%), moderate in 32 (15%) and poor in 16 (8%).
Conclusions: Chronic pain in children and
adolescents often results in considerable functional disability.
Functional improvement can be achieved using a multidisciplinary
approach to pain management in children.
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No data are available on the prevalence or incidence of paediatric
chronic pain in Australia, and only limited data exist on the
functional limitation that chronic and recurrent pain has on
affected children, their parents and siblings.1
Specialised integrated pain management clinics that offer
cognitive behavioural therapy programs are successful in the
management of adults with chronic pain,2 but few programs exist for
children and adolescents in Australia.
As no Australian epidemiological or demographic data exist for
children and adolescents with chronic pain, I performed a
prospective, descriptive study to investigate the demography,
clinical characteristics, treatment, functional limitations and
outcomes of patients referred to a paediatric multidisciplinary
pain clinic.
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Patient population | |
The Royal Children's Hospital is a tertiary paediatric referral
centre servicing Victoria. A multidisciplinary clinic for children
and adolescents with chronic pain, the Children's Pain Management
Clinic, was established in March 1998. From March 1998 to March 2000,
patients aged 0-18 years of age were prospectively and consecutively
included in the analysis. The Statistical Local Areas defined by the
Australian Bureau of Statistics3 were used to classify
residential location as rural or metropolitan Victoria.
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Interviewers |
All patients were assessed by one of three paediatric anaesthetists.
The initial interview involved taking a full medical and social
history and physical examination of the patient in the presence of one
or both parents. One or more allied health professionals
(physiotherapist, occupational therapist or clinical
psychologist) also assessed the children.
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Interview |
The interview followed a structured format. Responses to questions
were obtained from both child and parent(s), unless the child was
cognitively impaired, in which case the parent(s) or carer provided
information.
The questions related to diagnostic information (nature, site and
intensity of the pain), functional disability (time off school,
inability to partake in sporting activities) and sleep dysfunction.
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Definitions |
- Chronic pain was defined as "pain persisting beyond the time of
healing or pain which is persistent or near constant for three months
or longer".4
- Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) Types I and II were diagnosed
according to previously published criteria.5 CRPS is a condition in which
pain and disability are sustained, out of proportion to an initiating
noxious event, by mechanisms that are still incompletely
understood. Diagnosis is based on clinical findings, including
allodynia (non-painful stimulus eliciting pain) or hyperalgesia
(exaggerated sensitivity to pain) beyond the territory of a single
peripheral nerve, oedema, skin blood flow abnormality (colour
and/or temperature change) or abnormal sudomotor (sweating)
activity. CRPS Type I is distinguished from Type II in that Type II
follows nerve injury.
- Pain intensity was assessed by a pain assessment tool appropriate
for the patient's age and cognition: Eland pain diagram; visual
analogue scale; verbal numerical rating (1-10) scale; Wong-Baker
faces; and parental or carer report in the case of non-verbal
patients, toddlers and those with cognitive impairment.
- Outcomes were recorded as:
Good: Marked reduction
in the intensity of pain (no or minimal pain) and marked functional
improvement (return to school and sport where applicable, and
resumption of normal sleep pattern);
Moderate: Partial reduction in pain intensity
and/or some functional improvement (return to school or sport where
applicable or resumption of normal sleep pattern); or
Poor: No improvement in pain intensity or functional
activity.
Outcome was classified as unknown if there was no
follow-up.
The frequency and duration of follow-up were as clinically
indicated.
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| | Results |
Over the two-year study period, 207 patients aged 1-18 years were
referred to the Children's Pain Management Clinic (Box 1). Most
patients (57%) were referred by orthopaedic surgeons.
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Medical conditions and associated disability | |
Concomitant medical conditions (Box 2) were present in 106 (51%)
patients. The disease process, its treatment, complications of the
disease or side effects of the treatment accounted for the pain
experienced by 93 of these 106 patients.
A clear organic precipitant to the pain was identified in 39 of the 101
patients with no pre-existing medical condition. The cause of pain in
these patients was neuropathic (nerve injury, nerve entrapment or
neuroma) in 20 patients, soft tissue injury in 14, bone- or
joint-related in four, and renal colic in one. In 62 of these 101
patients, no clear aetiology was found. The abdomen (10 patients) was
the most common single site of presenting pain in this group, followed
by headache or facial pain (9), multiple sites of pain (9), and pain in
the foot (9), hand or forearm (8), knee (7), leg (5), back (2), shoulder
(1), chest (1) and neck (1).
CRPS was diagnosed in 44 of the 207 patients (Type I, 40 patients; Type
II, 4 patients). Females (33 patients) and the lower limb (33
patients) were predominantly affected. Mean age was 13.7 (range,
9-17) years. CRPS was precipitated by minor trauma in 18 patients, and
lower-limb surgery in six patients. No precipitant was identified in
nine patients.
Overall, 105 patients (95% of school attenders) missed at least five
days of school because of pain (independent of medical appointments)
(Box 3).
There were 147 (71%) patients with impaired ability to participate in
sport because of their pain. Of the remaining 60 patients, 43 were
unable to participate in sport because of their concomitant
condition, and 17 had no such inability on presentation.
Overall, 146 patients (71%) suffered daily or almost daily sleep
disruption attributable to pain. Of this group, 140 (96%) patients
woke up three times or less. Parents of children with cerebral palsy,
cognitive impairment or intellectual disability reported sleep
disruption in 16 of 22 patients. Waking each night in these patients
was more frequent and difficult to manage.
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Interventions |
Medications prescribed are listed in Box 4, and interventions are
listed in Box 5. Individuals may have received one or more of these
simultaneously or consecutively. No medication was prescribed in 75
of 207 (36%) patients; however, this group may have received any one or
more of the interventions listed. The median duration of follow-up
was four months (range, 2 weeks to 16 months).
Patients diagnosed with CRPS were treated as inpatients (26
patients) or outpatients (18 patients) depending on the severity of
their condition. Inpatients underwent a more intense and structured
rehabilitation program tailored to their individual requirements.
This involved cognitive behavioural therapy, physiotherapy (with
graded return to physical activity) and re-integration into school
and social activities. The median length of hospital stay was five
days.
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Outcomes |
Outcome was good in 134 (65%) patients, moderate in 32
(15%), poor in 16 (8%) and unknown in 25 (12%). Box 6
shows the outcomes for patients diagnosed with CRPS.
Of the 29 patients who had missed more than 40 days of school because of
pain, 23 began attending school regularly once treatment for their
pain syndrome commenced. Ten successfully underwent a graded
return-to-school program coordinated in conjunction with the
school, the Royal Children's Hospital Education Institute and the
Children's Pain Management Clinic. Of the 76 patients who had missed
between five and 40 days of school and who completed follow-up, 70
attended school regularly after intervention.
Of the 147 patients who had impaired ability to participate in sport
because of pain, 129 (88%) regained the ability after treatment.
Sleep disturbance was successfully managed in 129 of 146 patients
(88%). Most (122 patients or their parents) reported uninterrupted
sleep as a result of either analgesic intervention or successful use
of relaxation techniques. The remaining seven patients (or their
parents) reported marked improvement in the frequency of waking and
less troublesome return to sleep when they woke during the night.
Twelve (6%) of the 207 patients died of their underlying terminal
condition or its complications.
There were three complications related to therapy for pain. Two were
epidural-related in patients with cerebral palsy and CRPS: both
developed back pain and fever. One had an epidural infection and the
other paraspinous myositis with possible osteomyelitis. One
patient developed paraesthesiae after lumbar sympathetic nerve
block. All three patients recovered with no long-term sequelae.
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In my study, chronic pain in children and adolescents was associated
with considerable functional limitation, most commonly school
absenteeism, sleep disturbance and inability to perform sporting
activities. The duration of school absenteeism was significant and
could be expected to affect school performance, although this was not
specifically recorded. Previous studies from other countries have
reported on the incidence of functional disability in relation to
specific painful sites or conditions.1 In our patients, chronic
pain, irrespective of aetiology or site, commonly resulted in
significant functional disability.
More females than males were referred in all age brackets. CRPS,
headache, fibromyalgia, recurrent abdominal pain and somatoform
pain all occur more frequently in females than in males aged less than
18 years.6
More than a third of all patients referred were aged 12 years or less.
Recurrent abdominal pain is commonly reported in this age
group.7 However, only 11% of
children in this age group referred to our clinic complained of
abdominal pain, whereas half presented with limb pain. This may
indicate that recurrent abdominal pain is successfully dealt with
and understood by paediatricians, whereas limb pain is more likely to
be referred.
Patients from rural Victoria accounted for 29% of all referrals, in
keeping with the population distribution in Victoria.3 This has
implications regarding the provision of education of general
practitioners and services to rural areas.
CRPS was diagnosed in 21% of patients referred. The lower limb was more
commonly involved than the upper, and females were more often
affected than males. Previous studies from the United
States8 and Sweden9 have shown a
similar ratio of limb involvement. In these studies, females were
more commonly affected than in this study (5 and 13 times more often
than males, respectively). Unlike in those studies, in which a large
percentage of girls with CRPS were active in sports, gymnastics,
skating and dance, this was true for only 10% of our patients.
Children and adolescents with cerebral palsy made up the largest
single group of patients with a concomitant condition. Locating the
source of pain can be difficult in this group,10 especially in those with
cognitive impairment. Hip and/or back pain was the source in 55%.
Spasticity itself can cause pain11 and contributes to
deformity, subluxation, dislocation, capsulitis and
osteoarthritis in these regions. Sleep disruption was more frequent
and problematic in these children, both overall and on a nightly
basis. Addressing pain resulted in most patients sleeping
uninterrupted through the night. Eliminating or minimising sleep
disruption is of obvious benefit to the child and carers.12
The nature and management of chronic pain in children and adolescents
differs from that in adults. Bullying, sexual or physical abuse,
marital disharmony and difficulties at school may all contribute to
abnormal pain behaviour in children. Family therapy may be
indicated, as family situations can contribute to exacerbating and
maintaining pain behaviour in children. Parents as well as afflicted
children often need to be taught behavioural modification and
pain-coping strategies.
Abolition of pain, particularly in patients with chronic
conditions, is not always achievable. The diverse aetiologies which
manifest as pain behaviour necessitate a coordinated,
multidisciplinary approach. My results support this
multidisciplinary approach and focus on regaining function and
minimising pain behaviour. The lack of a psychologist (a
psychologist was initially a team member, but only for three months)
and psychiatrist as integral team members may have contributed to the
poor outcomes observed in some patients. Poor outcome was commonest
in patients from chaotic family environments or in those with
moderate intellectual disability. The latter are least likely to
respond to cognitive behavioural techniques. Behavioural
modification is better suited to this group, but may be difficult and
time consuming to implement.
A recent unpublished survey of tertiary paediatric hospitals in
Australia and New Zealand, conducted by the Paediatric Pain Working
Party of the Faculty of Pain Medicine, Australian and New Zealand
College of Anaesthetists, revealed that only three centres in
Australia and New Zealand have chronic pain management services
which meet their minimum requirements for multidisciplinary
staffing.13 Given the magnitude of
functional disability demonstrated in our population, the
provision of funding for paediatric chronic pain services requires
urgent attention.
The socioeconomic cost of chronic pain in children and adolescents is
considerable. Although not specifically addressed in this study, it
was apparent that there were implications for the child (education,
self-esteem, friendships), the parents (time off work caring for the
child and attending appointments, cost of medication,
hospitalisation and complementary therapies) and the healthcare
system (medical care, including serial referrals to multiple
specialists, medication and hospitalisation and allied healthcare
costs).
Future studies should address the prevalence and epidemiology of
pain in Australian children and adolescents, the early
identification of those in whom significant functional disability
exists and the cost-benefits of establishing multidisciplinary
paediatric pain centres. Future directions should include
education programs for GPs, paediatricians, schoolteachers and
counsellors and allied health professionals to recognise early
warning signals such as school absenteeism, frequent sick bay
attendances, failure to respond to treatment, and poor school sports
participation.
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- Palermo TM. Impact of recurrent and chronic pain on child and family
daily functioning: a critical review of the literature. J Dev
Behav Pediatr 2000; 21: 58-69.
-
Becker N, SjØgren P, Bech P, et al. Treatment outcome of chronic
non-malignant pain patients managed in a Danish multidisciplinary
pain centre compared with general practice: a randomised controlled
trial. Pain 2000; 84: 203-211.
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Australian Bureau of Statistics. Melbourne. A Social Atlas. 1996.
Census of Population and Housing. Canberra: Commonwealth of
Australia, 1998. (Catalogue no. 2030.2.)
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McGrath PJ, Finley GA. Chronic and recurrent pain in children and
adolescents. Progress in Pain Research and Management, Vol. 13.
Seattle: IASP Press, 1999.
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Boas RA. Complex regional pain syndromes: symptoms, signs, and
differential diagnosis. In: Janig W, Stanton-Hicks M, editors.
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy: A Reappraisal. Progress in Pain
Research and Management, Vol. 6. Seattle: IASP Press, 1999; 82.
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Perquin CW, Hazebroek-Kampschreur AAJM, Hunfield JAM, et al. Pain
in children and adolescents: a common experience. Pain 2000;
87: 51-58.
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Faull C, Nicol AR. Abdominal pain in six-year-olds: an
epidemiological study in a new town. J Child Psychol
Psychiatr 1986; 27: 251-260.
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Wilder RT, Wolohan M, Masek BJ, et al. Reflex sympathetic dystrophy
in children and adolescents: a follow-up of a cohort of 70 patients and
development of a treatment algorithm. J Bone Joint Surg Am
1992; 6: 910-919.
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Olsson GL, Arnér S, Hirsch G. Reflex sympathetic dystrophy in
children. In: Tyler DC and Krane EJ, editors. Advances in pain
research and therapy, Vol 15. New York: Raven Press, 1990; 323-331.
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Nolan J, Chalkiadis GA, Low J, et al. Anaesthesia and pain
management in cerebral palsy. Anaesthesia 2000; 55: 32-41.
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Barwood S, Ballieu C, Boyd R, et al. The analgesic effects of
botulinum toxin A: a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled
clinical trial. Dev Med Child Neurol 2000; 42: 116-121.
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Lewin DS, Dahl RE. Importance of sleep in the management of
pediatric pain. J Dev Behav Pediatr 1999; 20: 244-252.
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Requirements for multidisciplinary pain centres offering
training in pain medicine. Faculty of Pain Medicine, Australian and
New Zealand College of Anaesthetists College Policy Document PM2,
2000.
(Received 28 Nov 2000, accepted 18 Jun 2001)
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The Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, VIC.
George A Chalkiadis, DA, FANZCA, Anaesthetist, and Co-ordinator Pain Management.
Reprints will not be available from the author. Correspondence: Dr GA Chalkiadis, Royal Children's Hospital, Flemington Road, Parkville, VIC 3052.
chalkiagATcryptic.rch.unimelb.edu.au
©MJA 2001
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© 2001 Medical Journal of Australia.
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| 1: Demographic data |
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Residential location |
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| Age* (years) |
Number (%) |
Female |
City |
Rural |
Other† |
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| 0-9 |
27 (13%) |
70% |
17 |
8 |
2 |
| 10-12 |
47 (23%) |
64% |
33 |
11 |
3 |
| 13-15 |
75 (36%) |
73% |
53 |
20 |
2 |
| 16-18 |
58 (28%) |
83% |
36 |
21 |
1 |
| All |
207 (100%) |
73% |
139 |
60 |
8 |
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| *Mean age, 13.1 years (range, 1-18 years);
median age, 13 years. †These patients resided in the Australian Capital
Territory, New South Wales or South Australia. |
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| 2: Concomitant medical conditions |
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| Condition |
Number |
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| Cerebral palsy/spasticity |
22* |
| Malignant tumours |
18 |
| Scoliosis |
11* |
| Benign tumours |
7 |
| Cystic fibrosis |
6 |
| Fibromyalgia |
5 |
| Intellectual delay |
4 |
| Talipes equinovarus or flat feet |
4 |
| Vertebral or spinal cord abnormalities |
4 |
| Others |
33 |
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| *Four patients had both scoliosis and cerebral
palsy, one had Duchenne muscular dystrophy and scoliosis and one had spinal
muscular atrophy and scoliosis. |
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3: School days missed because of pain
Number of school days missed
* Nine children did not miss any days. Seven children no longer attended school because of their pain. na= Not applicable; patients were unable to attend school because of a concomitant condition or because they were not of school age.
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| 4: Medications prescribed |
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Number of patients |
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| Tricyclic antidepressant (amitriptyline
or nortriptyline) |
78 |
| Paracetamol |
21 |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
drug (oral or topical, including COX-2 inhibitors) |
31 |
| Opioid: oxycodone (oral) or morphine
(oral, subcutaneous or intravenous) |
21 |
| Anticonvulsants (carbamazepine,
sodium valproate or gabapentin) |
10 |
| Clonidine (oral, intravenous
or transdermal) |
14 |
| Benzodiazepines (diazepam, clonazepam)
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7 |
| Mexiletine |
10 |
| Capsaicin |
7 |
| Ketamine (intravenous) |
5 |
| Buscopan |
2 |
| Others (gaviscon, omeprazole,
quinine, vitamin C) |
1 for each medication |
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| 5: Interventions |
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Number of patients |
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| Acupuncture |
15 |
| Relaxation techniques |
98 |
| Trigger point injection |
7 |
| Tendon, neuroma or joint injection |
12 |
| Nerve block |
29* |
| Epidural |
28† |
| Psychology/psychiatry |
84 |
| Physiotherapy |
126 |
| Iontophoresis (dexamethasone) |
11 |
| Self-administered medication |
132 |
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*62 blocks performed on 29 patients. †3 patients
received 2 epidurals each. |
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| 6: Outcome in patients with complex regional
pain syndrome |
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| Outcome* |
Upper limb |
Lower limb |
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| Good |
8 |
26 |
| Moderate |
1 |
6 |
| Poor |
2 |
1 |
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| *Good: marked reduction in pain and marked
functional improvement. Moderate: some reduction in pain and some functional
improvement. Poor: no improvement in pain or functional ability. |
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