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Authors Richardson C, Kulkarni J
Received 30 May 2017
Accepted for publication 4 July 2017
Published 7 August 2017 Volume 2017:10 Pages 1861—1870
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S124664
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Amy Norman
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Michael Schatman
Background: Phantom limb pain (PLP) occurs in 50% and 80% of amputees.
Although it is often classified as a neuropathic pain, few of the large-scale
trials of treatments for neuropathic pain included sufficient numbers of PLP
sufferers to have confidence that they are effective in this condition. Many
therapies have been administered to amputees with PLP over the years; however,
as of yet, there appears to be no first-line treatment.
Objectives: To comprehensively review the literature on
treatment modalities for PLP and to identify the challenges currently faced by
clinicians dealing with this pain.
Method: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, British Nursing Index,
Cochrane and psycINFO databases were searched using “Phantom limb” initially as
a MeSH term to identify treatments that had been tried. Then, a secondary
search combining phantom limb with each treatment was performed to find papers
specific to each therapy. Each paper was assessed for its research strength
using the GRADE system.
Results: Thirty-eight therapies were identified. Overall,
the quality of evidence was low. There was one high-quality study which used
repetitive transcutaneous magnetic stimulation and found a statistical
reduction in pain at day 15 but no difference at day 30. Significant results
from single studies of moderate level quality were available for gabapentin,
ketamine and morphine; however, there was a risk of bias in these papers.
Mirror therapy and associated techniques were assessed through two systematic
reviews, which conclude that there is insufficient evidence to support their
use.
Conclusion: No decisions can be made for the first-line
management of PLP, as the level of evidence is too low. Robust studies on
homogeneous populations, an understanding of what amputees consider a
meaningful reduction in PLP and agreement of whether pain intensity is the
legitimate therapeutic target are urgently required.
Keywords: phantom limb
pain, review, treatment, pain
