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Review/overview of pain in sickle cell disease
Institution:2. SKB Department of Medicine,Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;3. CCM Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland;4. LEC Department of Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio;5. CD Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia;6. DSD Division of Hematology, Children''s National Medical Center, Washington, DC;11. WRS Department of Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University Health System, Richmond, Virginia;12. WTZ Department of Pediatrics, Connecticut Children''s Medical Center, Hartford, Connecticut
Abstract:Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a highly complex inherited disorder of hemoglobin structure. Although the molecular lesion is a single-point mutation, the sickle gene is pleiotropic in nature causing multiple phenotypic expressions that constitute the various complications of the disease. Its manifestations could be acute, chronic, nociceptive, neuropathic that could occur singly or in various combinations. Pain continues to be the major factor of SCD phenotypic complications and the most common cause of admissions to the Emergency Department and/or the hospital. Although progress has been made in understanding the pathophysiology of SCD as well as in developing curative therapies such as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and gene therapy, effective pain management continues to lag behind. Palliative therapies continue to be the major approach to the management of SCD and its complications. The advent of hydroxyurea made partial success in preventing the frequency of vaso-occlusive crises and l-glutamine awaits post-trial confirmation of benefits. The search for additional pharmacotherapeutic agents that could be used singly or in combination with hydroxyurea and/or l-glutamine awaits their dawn hopefully in the near future. The purpose of this review is to describe the various manifestations of SCD, their pathophysiology and their current management. Recent impressive advances in understanding the pathophysiology of pain promise the determination of agents that could replace or minimize the use of opioids.
Keywords:Pain  Sickle cell disease  Vaso-occlusive crisis  Chronic pain
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