首页|Treatment and diagnosis of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy: An update

Treatment and diagnosis of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy: An update

扫码查看
When peripheral neuropathy occurs due to chemotherapy treatment, it is referred to as chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). Typically, symptoms are sensory rather than motor and include reduced feeling and heightened sensitivity to pressure, pain, temperature, and touch. The pathophysiology of CIPN is very complex, and it involves multiple mechanisms leading to its development which will be described specifically for each chemotherapeutic class. There are currently no approved or effective agents for CIPN prevention, and Duloxetine is the only medication that is an effective treatment against CIPN. There is an unavoidable necessity to develop preventative and treatment approaches for CIPN due to its detrimental impact on patients' lives. The purpose of this review is to examine CIPN, innovative pharmacological and nonpharmacological therapy and preventive strategies for this illness, and future perspectives for this condition and its therapies.

Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathyNeuropathyPainPain managementIon channel-targeted therapies

Allison D. Desforges、Chance M. Hebert、Allyson L. Spence、Bailey Reid、Hemangini A. Dhaibar、Diana Cruz-Topete、Elyse M. Cornett、Alan David Kaye、Ivan Urits、Omar Viswanath

展开 >

LSU Health Shreveport, Shreveport, LA, USA

2022

Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy

Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy

SCI
ISSN:0753-3322
年,卷(期):2022.147