Superficial injection of Botulinum toxin has been advocated for cosmetic purposes but has also been reported to be helpful for some pain conditions. The investigators have observed prolonged profound analgesia following subcutaneous superficial injection of Botulinum Toxin Type A (BTA) in patients with certain types of neuropathic pain. The investigators propose to study if addition of BTA extends pain relief compared to placebo when injected subcutaneously into areas of cutaneous allodynia (the property that a normally non-noxious stimulus is perceived as painful).
Post-surgical neuromatous pain patients have marked cutaneous allodynia. Touching their skin with normally non-painful stimuli results in pain. Injected local anesthetics are often effective in providing temporary relief. In the course of clinical practice the investigators have observed that a number of patients with cutaneous allodynia have had marked persistent benefit from subcutaneous injection of Botulinum toxin Type A. Rather than killing targeted neurons, Botulinum toxin type A inhibits release of acetylcholine from cholinergic nerve terminals in a prolonged but ultimately reversible manner. Neuropathic pain and its hallmark allodynia are classically difficult to treat. Standard treatment with tricyclic antidepressants, anti-epileptic drugs, opiates and spinal cord stimulation is frequently disappointing leaving patients with refractory pain. Surgical or percutaneous ablation of involved nerves has fallen out of favor among many due to disappointing results. A pilot study is needed to assess the efficacy of superficially injected Botulinum Toxin type A for treatment of cutaneous allodynia and spontaneous pain among patients with neuropathic pain.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
84
Subcutaneous injection of Botulinum Toxin Type A into the patient's scar tissue
Subcutaneous Saline injection given at site of scar neuroma
Stanford University School of Medicine
Stanford, California, United States
Time Until Analgesic Failure
Participants made daily NRS reports via Palm Pilot, and "failure" was defined as (Pre-injection baseline NRS) - (Mean NRS for any 3 preceding days) ≤ 0; or 9 months
Time frame: Each participant was assessed for up to 224 days per intervention (injection) or until they returned to NRS baseline
NRS Score Three Weeks After Injection
The NRS scores range from 0-100, where 0 indicated no pain and 100 indicated the worst pain.
Time frame: Three weeks after injection
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