BMJ 1997;314:763 (15 March)
Editorials
Antidepressants and chronic pain
Effective analgesia in neuropathic pain and other syndromes
Antidepressants are used widely to treat symptoms other than depression, many of which
fit into a general category of pain. They include neuropathic pain (postherpetic neuralgia, diabetic
neuropathy (p 827)1), irritable bowel syndrome,
temporomandibular joint dysfunction, atypical facial pain, and fibromyalgia. In Britain no
antidepressant is licensed for these indications. Do they work?
There is strong evidence from systematic reviews of randomised trials that tricyclic
antidepressants are effective treatments for several of these conditions.2 3 4 For established postherpetic neuralgia, tricyclic antidepressants
seem to be the only drugs of proved benefit,4 and the
number needed to treat to achieve at least 50% pain relief after three to six weeks
compared with placebo was 2.3 (95% confidence interval 1.7 to 3.3).2 This means that two patients in five will achieve this (high) level
of relief who would not have done so with placebo. Numbers needed to treat of two to three
compare . . . [Full text of this article]

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Postherpetic neuralgia
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