02431nas a2200301 4500000000100000008004100001260001200042653003000054653001200084653001300096653002100109653001600130653001600146100001300162700001700175700001400192700001400206700001300220700001100233700001200244700001400256245007200270856008900342300000800431490000700439520166900446022001402115 2021 d c08/202110aClinical prediction rules10aleprosy10aNeuritis10aNeuropathic pain10aSensitivity10aSpecificity1 aGiesel L1 aHökerberg Y1 aPitta IJR1 aAndrade L1 aMoraes D1 aNery J1 aSarno E1 aJardim MR00aClinical prediction rules for the diagnosis of neuritis in leprosy. uhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8381570/pdf/12879_2021_Article_6545.pdf a8580 v213 a

BACKGROUND: Diagnosing neuritis in leprosy patients with neuropathic pain or chronic neuropathy remains challenging since no specific laboratory or neurophysiological marker is available.

METHODS: In a cross-sectional study developed at a leprosy outpatient clinic in Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, 54 individuals complaining of neural pain (single or multiple sites) were classified into two groups ("neuropathic pain" or "neuritis") by a neurological specialist in leprosy based on anamnesis together with clinical and electrophysiological examinations. A neurologist, blind to the pain diagnoses, interviewed and examined the participants using a standardized form that included clinical predictors, pain features, and neurological symptoms. The association between the clinical predictors and pain classifications was evaluated via the Pearson Chi-Square or Fisher's exact test (p < 0.05).

RESULTS: Six clinical algorithms were generated to evaluate sensitivity and specificity, with 95% confidence intervals, for clinical predictors statistically associated with neuritis. The most conclusive clinical algorithm was: pain onset at any time during the previous 90 days, or in association with the initiation of neurological symptoms during the prior 30-day period, necessarily associated with the worsening of pain upon movement and nerve palpation, with 94% of specificity and 35% of sensitivity.

CONCLUSION: This algorithm could help physicians confirm neuritis in leprosy patients with neural pain, particularly in primary health care units with no access to neurologists or electrophysiological tests.

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