Nociplastic Pain
From WikiMSK
Epidemiology
The prevalence of chronic pain in New Zealand, when defined as lasting for 6 months or longer, was measured at 16.9% in 2011. Prevalence increased with age and economic deprivation. Pacific and Asian peoples had lower rates of chronic pain than European/other.[1] Around one fifth of people with chronic pain have predominantly neuropathic pain.[citation needed] Neuropathic pain is more disabling than other forms of pain and is associated with a lower quality of life.[citation needed]
Definitions
The IASP definition of pain was recently updated in 2019.[2]
“An aversive sensory and emotional experience typically caused by, or resembling that caused by, actual or potential tissue injury”
—IASP Definition of Pain 2019
Key Articles
- {{#l:Cohen2016 - nociplastic pain third mechanistic descriptor.pdf}}
- {{#l:Woolf2011 - Central sensitisation.pdf}}
- {{#l:Woolf2014 - Nociceptive amplification naming.pdf}}
- {{#l:Yunus2008 - Central sensitivity syndrome.pdf}}
References
- โ Dominick et al.. Patterns of chronic pain in the New Zealand population. The New Zealand medical journal 2011. 124:63-76. PMID: 21946879.
- โ International Association for the Study of Pain (2019) IASPโs Proposed New Definition of Pain Released for Comment. Available at: https://www.iasp-pain.org/PublicationsNews/NewsDetail.aspx?ItemNumber=9218 (accessed 27 July 2020).