Title: Pruritus and pain management in EB
1Pruritus and pain management in EB
- Jemima Mellerio
- St Johns Institute of Dermatology
- Great Ormond Street Hospital
- London UK
2Pruritus and pain management in EB
- Pain Assessment
- Sources of pain in EB
- General measures
- Specific measures
- Pruritus General measures
- EB pruriginosa
3Pain in EB
- Pain is a feature for all people with EB
- Individual the same tissue damage may cause
different level of pain in different people - The same procedure may cause different levels of
pain at different times in an individual
4Pain in EB assessment
- Individual and patient-focused
- Cultural and social influences
- Use a recognised tool e.g. visual analogue scale,
Mc Gill pain questionnaire, pictorial
5Pain in EB assessment
6Pain in EB assessment
7Pain in EB assessment
- Neonates and infants
- restlessness
- persistent shrill cry
- raised heart and respiratory rate
- raised blood pressure
- drawn up limbs
- chin trembling
8Pain in EB sources
9- Blisters
- Wounds
- Esophageal - blisters and reflux
- Dental
- Corneal erosions
- Anal fissures
- Procedural pain e.g. dressings, bathing,
venepuncture
10- Inflammation of skin and mucosae
- Neuropathic pain
- Constipation
- Contractures
- Osteoporosis
11Pain in EB general measures
Strong opioids /- non-opioids
Step 3
Weak opioids /- non-opioids
Step 2
NSAIDs Paracetamol
Step 1
12Pain in EB general measures
- If anxiety, consider midazolam
- May require long-acting opioid for chronic pain
e.g. MST - Fentanyl lozenges useful for procedural and
break-through pain - Neuropathic pain may respond to amitriptyline,
nortriptyline, gabapentin or pregabalin
13Pain in EB general measures
- Non-pharmacological measures
- physiotherapy
- hydrotherapy
- guided imagery
- distraction
- acupuncture/acupressure
14Pain in EB specific measures
- Try to assess all types of pain
- May need several different approaches
simultaneously - Need to individualise pain management
15Pain in EB bullae and wounds
- Give analgesia before dressings
- Lance tense blisters
- Ethyl chloride spray immediately beforehand
- Have dressings ready
- Prepare the environment
- Distraction
- Atraumatic dressings
16Pain in EB bullae and wounds
- Topical opioids
- 10 mg morphine
- sulphate in 15 g
- hydrogel (Intrasite)
- with dressing
- changes
- (up to 0.2mg/kg morphine)
17Pain in EB oral mucosa
- Specialised teats for infants e.g. Haberman
feeder - Lubricate teats with teething gel
- Difflam spray
- NSAIDs in older children and adults
- Gelclair to coat oral mucosa
18Pain in EB esophagus
- Reflux can be a big problem
- Stepped approach with H2 blocker (ranitidine),
domperidone and proton pump inhibitor (omeprazole
or lansoprazole) - Nebulised or systemic steroids if acute
blistering - Esophageal dilatation if necessary
19Pain in EB anus
- Perianal blisters or fissures
- Stool softeners e.g. Movicol (polyethylene
glycol), increased fibre e.g soluble fibre in
feeds, adequate fluid intake - Lubricate anal margin before bowels open e.g. KY
jelly, 5 lignocaine gel
20Pain in EB corneal erosion
- Regular ophthalmology review
- Lubricating eye drops and ointments especially if
ectropion - Treat blepharitis
- Regular analgesia for acute injury
- Avoid light
- Apply drops and ointments to lid margin if eye
closed
21Pain in EB bones
- Osteoporosis common in EB especially severe types
- May be associated vertebral crush fractures
- Calcium and vitamin D supplements if necessary
- Bisphosphonates to relieve bony pain e.g. IV
pamidronate, po risedronate
22Pain in EB malignancy
- Use stepped approach
- No fixed upper limit on opioids
- Different modalities surgery, radiotherapy,
chemotherapy, systemic steroids - Involvement of Hospice and Palliative Care Team
- Hollistic approach to management of terminal
disease
23Pruritus in EB
24Pruritus in EB
- Very common
- Very distressing
- Affects all aspects of life including sleep
- Very resistant to treatment
25Pruritus in EB
- Emollients e.g. Aloe Propolis
- Dermol cream
- Menthol-containing
- Antihistamines disappointing but sedation may
be useful - Topical steroids disappointing and limits to use
- Psychological approaches e.g. distraction
26EB pruriginosa
- Clinical variant of DEB
- Differential includes lichen planus, nodular
prurigo or artefact - Recessive or dominant
- May co-exist with ordinary DEB in the family
- ? Etiology?IgE, atopy
- May be delayed onset
27EB pruriginosa
- Emollients
- Antihistamines
- Ondansetron
- Topical steroids
- Wet wraps
- Honey dressings and ointment
- Topical tacrolimus or pimecrolimus
- Cyclosporin
- Thalidomide
28Other causes of itch in EB
- Xerosis
- Eczema
- Contact and irritant dermatitis
- Drug rashes
- Scabies
- Urticaria and dermographism
29Pain management in EB summary
30Pruritus in EB summary
31References
- Fine JD et al. Assessment of mobility, activities
and pain in different subtypes of epidermolysis
bullosa. Clin Exp Dermatol 2004 29 122-7. - Herod J et al. Epidermolysis bullosa in children
pathophysiology, anaesthesia and pain management.
Paediatr Anaesth 2002 12 388-97. - Watterson G et al. Peripheral opioids in
imflammatory pain. Arch Dis Childhood 2004 89
679-81.