LETTERS |
Centre for Rheumatology, University College London Hospitals, London,
UK
Department of Oral Surgery, University College London Hospitals, London,
UK
Correspondence to: Professor R Grahame, The Hypermobility Clinic, Centre for Rheumatology, UCL Hospitals, 4th Floor, Arthur Stanley House, 4050 Tottenham Street, London W1T 4NJ, UKE-mail: rodneygrahame{at}aol.com
When taking biopsies to assess skin strength in EhlersDanlos syndrome type III (EDSIII), a Danish group noticed that the patients experienced much pain despite conventional local anaesthesia.1 When asked, all these patients reported previous experience of partial or complete failure of local anaesthesia in dental or obstetric proceduresfor which reason some had been dismissed as hysterics. Pursuing this finding, Arendt-Nielsen et al.2 compared the effects of local anaesthesia in 8 patients with EDSIII and 8 controls. Although the patients did gain analgesia from intradermal lidocaine the duration of effect was much shorter than in controls. EDSIII (now known as EDShypermobility type) is regarded by many authorities as identical to joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS).3,4 We wish to draw attention to the possibility of resistance to local anaesthesia in individuals with this common and under-diagnosed condition.
| Box 2 Five-part questionnaire for identifying hypermobility
(Ref. 7) Answers in the
affirmative to 2 or more questions suggest hypermobility with sensitivity
8085% and specificity 8090%
|
| Box 3 Brighton criteria for joint hypermobility syndrome
(JHS) (Ref. 8) JHS is
diagnosed in the presence of two major criteria, or one major and two minor
criteria, or four minor criteria. Two minor criteria will suffice where there
is an unequivocally affected first-degree relative. Major
Minor
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Many normal people have hypermobile joints and medical diagnosis of the medical syndrome requires symptomswhich can include chronic pain, impairment of proprioception, and temporomandibular joint dysfunction (a manifestation of which dentists may be unaware).5 JHS is overrepresented in general rheumatology clinic populations and in our experience (RG and AJH)6 many of these patients report failure of local anaesthetics. This matter was addressed briefly in a paper published in 2003.7 A questionnaire was completed by 172 female Caucasian JHS patients, 53 non-hypermobile age-matched controls, and 28 individuals who showed evidence of hypermobility with insufficient features to qualify for JHS (HM-sine-JHS) as defined by the Brighton criteria.8 We asked If you have ever had a local anaesthetic injection (dentist/minor surgery/epidural), did you think that it was as effective as it should have been?. 58% of JHS patients, 21% of controls and 14% of the HM-sine-JHS group answered in the negative. For JHS versus controls the odds ratio was a highly significant 2.85. Although the question was simplistic, non-exploratory, and reliant on recall and selfperception, the difference between JHS and controls was striking. Neither group had knowledge of any study hypothesis. At the time there was nothing of this nature documented in patient information sheets or published research.
We suspect that in many people JHS goes unrecognized. So, how can a busy clinician, mindful of possible resistance to local anaesthesia, make the diagnosis? There are two easy methods for identifying hypermobilitycarry out a Beighton score9 (Box 1); or ask the patient to answer a five-part screening questionnaire7 (Box 2). The phenotype is shown in Box 3.
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Although the pathophysiology of this phenomenon remains unresolved, an important clue that a patient is at risk of local anaesthetic failure might be in front of our eyes.
REFERENCES
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