Diagnostics of Chronic Pain in Children and Adolescents


General criteria: pain disorder

A. Pain in one or more anatomical sites is the predominant focus of the clinical presentation and is of sufficient severity to warrant clinical attention

B. The pain causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning

C. Psychological factors are judged to have an important role in the onset, severity, exacerbation, or maintenance of the pain

D. The symptom or deficit is not intentionally produced or feigned (as in factitious disorder or malingering)

E. The pain is not better accounted for by a mood, anxiety, or psychotic disorder and does not meet criteria for dyspareunia

Pain disorder associated with psychological factors (307.80)

Psychological factors are judged to have the major role in the onset, severity, exacerbation, or maintenance of the pain. (If a general medical condition is present, it does not have a major role in the onset, severity, exacerbation, or maintenance of the pain.) This type of pain disorder is not diagnosed if criteria are also met for Somatization disorder

Pain disorder associated with both psychological factors and a general medical condition (307.89)

Both psychological factors and a general medical condition are judged to have important roles in the onset, severity, exacerbation, or maintenance of the pain. The associated general medical condition or anatomical site of the pain is coded on Axis III



In both disorders, a biopsychosocial view is important since there are both physical and psychosocial determinants of the disorder. The main differences between the two diagnoses are the factors triggering and maintaining the pain condition.

For the treatment of pain disorders, it is important to identify any underlying physical disease since repeatedly relapsing (inflammatory) processes may cause pain (typical examples thereof are migraine or juvenile arthritis). Those types of underlying diseases should be treated with analgesics (for details, see Sect. 6.7.2). Apart from that, the presence of any underlying chronic physical disease does not change the further therapeutic approach to the pain disorder (for a more detailed view, see Sect. 7.6).

The biopsychosocial criteria relevant to the diagnostics of pain disorders underscore the importance of a detailed pain history comprising medical as well as psychosocial factors. Apart from psychological diagnostic assessment, it is advisable to talk to the previously treating physician/therapist, e.g., the family doctor. For the evaluation of treatment, it has proved useful in our experience to repeatedly assess the various dimensions of the pain.



3.2 Medical Diagnostic Procedures


As in all areas of medicine, a detailed medical history is of utmost importance and may provide hints on which diagnostic steps should follow, apart from the obligatory thorough physical examination. In children and adolescents, physicians should try to apply the least burdening (also including radiation protection) and least invasive procedure. Certain procedures depend on the patient’s cooperation. If for an MRI examination a sedative or anesthesia are necessary (e.g., with younger children), risks and benefit should be carefully weighed.

Invasive procedures should only be applied in order to clarify a specific hypothesis. Some diagnostic procedures may even traumatize the patient; this should be avoided at all costs. Pain caused by taking blood for “routine blood chemistry” is unnecessary and avoidable, especially if there is no sound reason to expect a gain in information. Any necessary procedure should be performed under local anesthesia, for instance, using EMLA®. One should refrain from performing procedures explicitly requested by the parents, but not medically indexed.


3.2.1 Exclusion of Secondary Headache


The physician should be aware of which cranial structures are sensitive to pain when trying to exclude secondary headaches. Pain-sensitive structures are the skin, periosteum, and aponeuroses. In the field of ENT, pain-sensitive structures are the nasal conchae, the various sinuses, and the ear. The eyes are pain sensitive as are the dura mater, arachnoidea, and the cerebral vessels, but not so the greater part of the brain itself, where nociceptors are missing. The posterior cranial fossa and its content are sensibly innervated by the upper ipsilateral cervical roots via the glossopharyngeal and the vagus nerve. The middle and the anterior cranial fossae are innervated by the ipsilateral trigeminal nerve. By experimental stimulation of the C1 root, pain sensation is provoked in the area of the ipsilateral eye, and frontally, which shows that those areas are obviously innervated by C1.

This knowledge allows for the pinpointing of the causes of pain. In most children with headache, there is no physical cerebral correlate. The goal is to identify those patients with secondary headache who will benefit from causal therapy.

One should take into account:

1.

Preceding head injury

 

2.

Inflammation of the sinus

 

3.

Arterial hypertension

 

4.

Increased pressure of cerebrospinal fluid (hydrocephalus; pseudotumor cerebri)

 

5.

Any kind of space-occupying process

 

6.

Vasculitis (arteriitis)

 

7.

Meningitis

 

8.

Aneurism of cerebral vessels

 

9.

Hypoglycemia, especially in diabetics

 

10.

Metabolic disorders like hypo- or hyperthyroidism

 

11.

Any adverse effects of drugs

 

Apart from the neurological examination in headaches of so-far-unknown origin, an EEG and an ophthalmologic examination are often indicated, including testing visual acuity and papilledema in order to exclude the possibility of increased cerebral pressure. Adequate equipment and expertise allow for a sonography of the papilla and the eyeball. Medical imaging (computer tomography; MRI) helps detect anatomic anomalies, space-occupying processes, or inflammation and vascular diseases. The most appropriate procedure can best be chosen in discussion with the radiologist in order to avoid any unnecessary burden or diagnostics not leading to the results necessary for confirming hypotheses.


3.2.2 Exclusion of Secondary Abdominal Pain


Abdominal pain in children is in most cases benign. But abdominal pain as a sign of an acute abdomen may indicate life-threatening diseases and may lead to permanent complaints limiting everyday activity. Since the interrelationships are complex, a physical cause should be excluded in any case of acute or chronic abdominal pain. Patients with functional abdominal pain not caused by an underlying organic disease sometimes undergo unnecessary invasive diagnostic procedures and long-­lasting inappropriate therapeutic trials or diets that are ineffective. This will make the child and his/her parents insecure; kindergarten or school is not attended regularly, and quality of life is diminished due to the pain but also due to the time spent at the doctor’s or in hospital (for details, see Sect. 4.6.1).

Characteristics of abdominal pain differ. In most cases, the child will report unspecific periumbilical pain normally attributed to functional pain (Sect. 4.6.2). In any case of sustained pain, basic diagnostics are indicated. A detailed medical history is helpful in order to get an overview of investigations already performed and to rapidly start with necessary diagnostic measures not yet performed. The following questions have proved helpful for us in the assessment of abdominal pain:

1.

Is there a circadian rhythm of complaints?

 

2.

Is the pain associated with meals?

 

3.

Is the pain associated with eating certain foods?

 

4.

Is any food avoided due to intolerance?

 

5.

How is the frequency of bowel movements and stool consistency? Any blood observed in the stool?

 

6.

Is there any stool lubrication?

 

7.

Is the pain constant or intermittent?

 

8.

In girls, is there any correlation with menstruation?

 

9.

Any unintended loss of weight?

 

Since the abdomen is mainly connected to C-fibers, the patient is usually unable to precisely localize the painful organ. Since this is not the place to discuss the differentials of an acute abdomen, we will focus on chronic abdominal pain. Medical history and supplemental examinations are necessary in the diagnostic process. The following diseases should be excluded:

1.

Chronic inflammation of the bowel (Crohn’s disease; ulcerative colitis)

 

2.

Ulcus disease

 

3.

Gastrointestinal tumor

 

4.

Mesenteric ischemia

 

5.

Meckel diverticulum

 

6.

Endometriosis

 

7.

Ovarian tumor

 

8.

Stenosis of the small intestine (following radiation; adhesions)

 

9.

Post-surgery functional disorder (adhesions)

 

10.

Disaccharide deficiency (fructose malabsorption; lactose malabsorption)

 

11.

Celiac disease

 

12.

Metabolic disorder (diabetes mellitus; Fabry’s disease)

 

13.

Chronic hereditary pancreatitis.

 

The incidence of carbohydrate malabsorption has substantially increased during the last number of years. One should know that a pathologic H2-breathing test in the absence of adequate clinical signs under exercise by no means proves a fructose or lactose malabsorption. Be aware of all the therapeutic consequences following a false-positive diagnosis. Dietary restrictions will add to the emotional burden. Balancing the risks and benefits, a diet only makes sense in our view in severe cases of carbohydrate malabsorption. By no means should a diet be prescribed in the absence of pathological clinical signs (Sect. 4.6).


3.2.3 Exclusion of Secondary Muscle or Joint Disease


Musculoskeletal pain may originate from various causes. In children, it is advisable to reconstruct the medical history, questioning the parents and the child independently. The medical history should be extended to the weeks before the onset of disease. Especially in children, it is well known that various (minor) infections may trigger reactive arthritis. There are reports of joint complaints after the use of certain antibiotics or other drugs.

(Noninvasive) joint sonography may deliver first clues to the diagnosis. Changes in the cortical bone may indicate an osteomyelitis. In case of any findings, ­sonography should be supplemented with conventional x-ray or MRI. Nontraumatic pain of the musculoskeletal system may be due to aseptic osteonecrosis (i.e., Perthes disease) or chronic nonbacterial osteomyelitis. In most cases, radiological findings will lead to the correct diagnosis. The diagnosis of juvenile idiopathic arthritis requires testing the blood chemistry (CRP, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, quantitative immunoglobulin in serum, complement system).

Generally, with back pain that is unresponsive to active measures such as training the back muscles or omitting excessive sports activities (in adolescents!), excluding a secondary cause is recommended, for instance, by doing x-ray imaging, scintigraphy of the skeleton, MRI of the affected spinal part, or blood ­chemistry (leucocytes, erythrocytes, platelets, blood smear, inflammatory parameters).

The following diseases are of importance in secondary back pain (Table 3.2).


Table 3.2
Diagnoses with chronic back pain


































Diseases of the back

Diseases beyond the back

Aneurysmatic bone cyst

Disorder of a parenchymal abdominal organ

Non-inflamed necrosis

Leukemia

Protrusion of an intervertebral disc

Inflammation

Functional – “blockade” of the vertebral joints

Bone tumor (benign; malignant)

Osteoporosis

Post-accident (i.e. fracture)

Rheumatism

Scheuermann’s disease

Spondylolistesis


3.3 Psychological Diagnostic Procedures


In Chap. 2, we discussed the role of psychological factors extensively, both in the development and the maintenance of chronic pain. It is important to examine these factors in the psychological assessment. Generally, questionnaires are a valuable basic psychological diagnostic tool. However, they should never act as a substitute for a clinical interview or in-person talk; instead they are meant for screening or for building hypotheses (Andrasik and Schwartz 2006).


3.3.1 Assessment of Pain-Related Cognition and Coping Strategies


Walker et al. (2005) demonstrated that passive coping strategies (e.g., catastrophizing, social withdrawal) are positively correlated with increased pain symptoms (e.g., pain intensity), high pain-related impairment, and increased depressive symptoms after 3 months. Adaptive strategies, such as acceptance or self-encouragement, are negatively correlated with depressive symptoms (Walker et al. 2005). A meta-analysis on cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) of chronic pain in childhood and adolescence found that education in active coping strategies plays a central role in CBT (Eccleston et al. 2002). This study also reports that coping strategies in childhood and adolescence are not stable over time (Gil et al. 1997). Therefore, any therapy should aim at the reduction of passive coping strategies and teach active coping strategies (Walker et al. 2005). Sections 6.4.7, 6.5.3, and 6.6.3 focus on the implementation of active coping strategies into everyday life, both on the ward and in the family. Hechler and colleagues (2010b) showed that 3 months after the inpatient therapy at the German Paediatric Pain Centre (GPPC), passive pain coping and the search for social support were reduced. Changes in coping behavior were associated with a decrease in pain intensity and pain-related disability in everyday life (Hechler et al. 2010b). Questionnaires for the assessment of ­pain-related cognition and coping strategies are the Waldron/Varni Paediatric Pain Coping Inventory (PPCI (Varni et al. 1996)), the Pain Response Inventory (PRI (Walker et al. 1997)), and the Pain Coping Questionnaire (PCQ (Reid et al. 1998)) presented in Table 3.3.
Oct 21, 2016 | Posted by in PAIN MEDICINE | Comments Off on Diagnostics of Chronic Pain in Children and Adolescents

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