Is Your Spinal Pain Inflammatory or Neuropathic?
/By Forest Tennant, PNN Columnist
Every person with Adhesive Arachnoiditis (AA) or other spinal canal disorder needs to determine if their pain is primarily inflammatory, neuropathic or both. Why? The treatments are different.
AA is fundamentally an inflammatory disease that involves two different intraspinal canal tissues: the cauda equina nerve roots and the arachnoid-dural covering of the spinal canal. The inflammation causes damage to the nerve roots, so electricity either can’t pass or it doesn’t pass in a smooth, natural flow.
Nerve damage that blocks or alters electricity conduction is called “neuropathic” pain. AA usually has both inflammatory and neuropathic pain, but the inflammation may resolve and leave behind damaged nerve roots and neuropathic pain.
The inflammatory and neuropathic pain of AA may also develop into Intractable Pain Syndrome, which is constant, incurable pain with cardiovascular, endocrine (hormonal) and autoimmune complications.
Persons with AA usually need to treat both kinds of pain – inflammatory and neuropathic -- but one type may be predominant. A blood test for inflammatory markers is helpful, but not totally diagnostic.
If your pain improves with a trial of ketorolac (1 or 2 injections) or a corticosteroid (Medrol Dose Pak or dexamethasone), you have active inflammation that must be treated. We also recommend botanical anti-inflammatory agents, such as curcumin/turmeric, Andrographis and serrapeptase.
Prescription medications for neuropathic pain include gabapentin (Neurontin), diazepam, carisoprodol, topiramate, Lyrica and Cymbalta.
Every person with AA of the cervical and/or lumbar spines should experiment with topical medications, such as the Salonpas patch, lidocaine gel or patch, Voltaren gel and diclofenac (prescription needed).
Topical medication that is applied and massaged into the skin may dissolve through the tissues to the inflamed or damaged area. On average, you can expect 10 to 25% additional pain relief, plus the potential to permanently reduce your pain. Sometimes topical medication will relieve painful areas that other drugs taken orally or by injection cannot reach.
Forest Tennant is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. This column is adapted from bulletins recently issued by the Arachnoiditis Research and Education Project. Readers interested in subscribing to the bulletins should send an email to tennantfoundation92@gmail.com.
The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.