A Review of Select Centralized Pain Syndromes: Relationship With Childhood Sexual Abuse, Opiate Prescribing, and Treatment Implications for the Primary Care Physician

Health Serv Res Manag Epidemiol. 2015 Jan 26:2:2333392814567920. doi: 10.1177/2333392814567920. eCollection 2015 Jan-Dec.

Abstract

Pain can be broadly divided into 3 classes, including nociceptive or inflammatory pain (protective), neuropathic (pathological, occurring after damage to the nervous system), or centralized (pathological, due to abnormal function but with no damage or inflammation to the nervous system). The latter has been posited to occur when descending analgesic pathways are attenuated and/or glutamatergic transmission is facilitated. Additionally, this "pain prone phenotype" can be associated with early life trauma and a suboptimal response to opiates. This article will review the relationships between centralized pain syndromes (ie, fibromyalgia, chronic low back pain), childhood sexual abuse, and opiate misuse. Finally, treatment implications, potentially effecting primary care physicians, will be discussed.

Keywords: anticonvulsants; centralized pain syndromes; childhood sexual trauma; opiate misuse; serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.