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Neuropathic Pain

Analysis of the Risk Factors for Mechanical Allodynia in Herpetic Neuralgia: A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Study

ORCID Icon, , , , &
Pages 3309-3318 | Received 24 Apr 2023, Accepted 18 Sep 2023, Published online: 02 Oct 2023
 

Abstract

Purpose

Mechanical allodynia is reportedly common during herpetic neuralgia. The purpose of this study was to establish a risk prediction model to predict the individual risk of allodynia in herpetic neuralgia.

Methods

Three hundred and eighty-six patients with trunk herpetic neuralgia were divided into two regions, T2-5 and T6-11. The causality between allodynia and other factors was analyzed by a binary logistic regression model.

Results

42.2% of subjects had allodynia, 137 suffered from dynamic allodynia, and 110 with dynamic allodynia experienced local sweating. The following 5 items as predictors determined this model: local sweating (Odd Ratio = 27.57, P<0.001), lesion location (Odd Ratio=2.46, P =0.017), pain intensity (Odd Ratio=1.38, P =0.020), pain duration (Odd Ratio=0.94, P =0.006), and local scars (Odd Ratio=0.07, P<0.001). The presence and development of allodynia are associated with local sweating. The positive proportion of the Iodine-starch test between the T2-5 (50.0%) with the T6-11 (23.7%) had a statistically significant difference (χ2=5.36, P=0.021). 29.5% of patients at the T2-6 had obvious sweating, which was different from only sticky feelings at the T6-11 (70.5%, χ2=10.88, P=0.001). 19.2% of patients with residual scars and allodynia was significantly lower than 48.5% of patients without allodynia (χ2=15.28, P<0.001).

Conclusion

This analysis suggests that local sweating is a concomitant symptom in dynamic allodynia, which imply the sympathetic nerves innervating the sweat glands of the skin were also involved during herpetic neuralgia. This may assist in the evaluation of dynamic allodynia and prove the role of sympathetic nerve intervention for herpetic neuralgia.

Disclosure

None of the authors has any financial or personal conflict of interest to disclose.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81771209) for Gang Xu. The funders had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, manuscript preparation, and publication decisions.