Greater Chesapeake Hand to Shoulder
  • Online Bill Pay
  • Complete Patient Forms
  • Request an Appointment
  • Blog
Call today for an appointment:
(410) 296-6232
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Patient Testimonials
    • Press Room
    • In the Community
    • Careers
  • Meet our Providers
    • Christopher L. Forthman, MD
    • James P. Higgins, MD
    • Peter C. Innis, M.D.
    • Kristin E. Karim, M.D.
    • Michael S. Murphy, MD
    • Keith A. Segalman, M.D.
    • Valeriy Shubinets, MD
    • Neal B. Zimmerman, MD
    • Ryan M. Zimmerman, MD
    • Our Staff
  • Our Specialties
    • Hand
    • Wrist
    • Elbow
    • Shoulder
    • Sports Medicine
    • Workers Compensation
    • Pediatric Orthopedic Care
    • Advanced Technologies
    • On-site Services
  • Resources & Links
  • Lutherville SurgiCenter
    • Surgery Center Health Survey
  • Locations
    • Lutherville
    • Bel Air
    • Clarksville
    • Pasadena
    • Westminster
  • Contact Us

Phantom Limb Pain

Back to Patient Education
  • Introduction
  • Anatomy
  • Causes
  • Symptoms
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
  • Prevention
  • Am I at Risk
  • Advancements

Introduction

Phantom limb pain is a real condition that occurs in some people after the amputation of an arm or leg.  People with phantom limb feel pain as if the amputated limb is still there.  The exact mechanism of phantom limb pain is not well known, but it appears to be related to the way nerve signals are processed in the brain.  There are several different types of treatment to relieve symptoms, and researchers are investigating ways to prevent the condition.

Back to top

Anatomy

The brain and nerves throughout the body transmit information to each other in a complex manner.  The brain processes many nerve signals for pain, temperature, touch, and body positioning all the time.  When a limb or part of a limb is amputated, the nerves are surgically cut and the nerve transmission is disrupted.  Eventually the nerve endings heal.
Back to top

Causes

Phantom limb pain is not imaginary.  It is a real condition with a real physical cause.  Researchers have used sophisticated brain mapping techniques to demonstrate that the pain that people with phantom limb pain feel is real. The exact cause of phantom limb pain is unknown.  It appears that after an arm or leg is amputated the nerves and memories in the brain send faulty signals as the circuitry attempts to “rewire” itself.

Back to top

Symptoms

Phantom limb pain is pain that occurs where the amputated limb once was.  The pain may be throbbing, shooting, stabbing, burning, or squeezing.  The pain is commonly felt in the farthest place from the body; for example, in the foot of an amputated limb.  The pain typically comes and goes.
Back to top

Diagnosis

Although there is no specific test for phantom limb pain, a doctor can make the diagnosis by reviewing your medical history and conducting an examination.  Your doctor will ask you to describe your pain in detail to help differentiate it from stump pain, a separate condition.
Back to top

Treatment

There are a variety of treatments for phantom limb pain.  It is rather common to try more than one type of treatment before discovering what works the best for you.  Treatment may include medications such as antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and narcotic pain medication.  Pain management therapies such as nerve stimulation (TENS), spinal cord stimulation, acupuncture, medication injections, or implanted medication pumps can help.  In rare cases, surgery is used for stump revision or deep brain stimulation.

Back to top

Prevention

Researchers are studying the use of medications before surgery (Calcitonin) and after surgery (Ketamine) to help prevent phantom limb pain.  Investigators hope that these medications will be successful, but more research is needed.
Back to top

Am I at Risk

You may be at risk for phantom limb after an amputation.  People with pain before amputation, stump pain after amputation, or poor-fitting artificial limbs (prostheses) may have a higher risk for phantom limb pain.
Back to top

Advancements

Researchers are studying the effectiveness of using mirrored boxes with therapy, artificial limbs with electrical signals, and virtual reality goggles that have demonstrated to help some people.
Back to top

Copyright ©  - iHealthSpot Interactive - www.iHealthSpot.com

This information is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It should not be used in place of an individual consultation or examination or replace the advice of your health care professional and should not be relied upon to determine diagnosis or course of treatment.

The iHealthSpot patient education library was written collaboratively by the iHealthSpot editorial team which includes Senior Medical Authors Dr. Mary Car-Blanchard, OTD/OTR/L and Valerie K. Clark, and the following editorial advisors: Steve Meadows, MD, Ernie F. Soto, DDS, Ronald J. Glatzer, MD, Jonathan Rosenberg, MD, Christopher M. Nolte, MD, David Applebaum, MD, Jonathan M. Tarrash, MD, and Paula Soto, RN/BSN. This content complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information. The library commenced development on September 1, 2005 with the latest update/addition on February 16, 2022. For information on iHealthSpot’s other services including medical website design, visit www.iHealthSpot.com.

Footer

Patient Education

Patient Education

Award-winning patient education materials on hundreds of orthopedic conditions at your fingertips.
Learn More
drayer
ASSH
AAOS
AAAHS
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Meet our Providers
  • Our Staff
  • Patient Testimonials
  • Press Room
  • In the Community
  • Careers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Sitemap
  • Our Specialties
  • Hand
  • Wrist
  • Elbow
  • Shoulder
  • Sports Medicine
  • Workers Compensation
  • Pediatric Orthopedic Care
  • Advanced Technologies
  • On-site Services
  • Patient Information
  • Resources & Links
  • Lutherville SurgiCenter
  • Surgery Center Health Survey
  • Locations
  • Contact Us
  • Our Blog
  • Request an Appointment
  • Patient Forms
  • Bill Pay Portal
  • For Employees
  • For Physicians

LUTHERVILLE (Main office)
1400 Front Avenue, Suite 100
Lutherville, MD 21093

BEL AIR Office
12 MedStar Blvd., Suite 300
Bel Air, MD 21015

CLARKSVILLE Office
6100 Day Long Lane, Suite 203
Clarksville, MD 21029

PASADENA Office
8028 Ritchie Highway, Suite 207
Pasadena, MD 21122

WESTMINSTER Office
844 Washington Road, Suite 102
Westminster, MD 21157

Copyright © Greater Chesapeake Hand Specialists. All rights reserved

iHealthspot Medical Website Design and Medical Marketing by iHealthSpot.com

Greater Chesapeake Hand to Shoulder has 7 locations throughout Maryland offering advanced upper extremity orthopedic care for conditions and injuries of the shoulder, arm, wrist, elbow, hand and fingers. Our orthopedic surgeons and plastic surgeons possess the sub-specialty as hand surgeons providing treatment for shoulder pain, arm pain, wrist pain, elbow pain, hand pain, sports injuries, work related injury, arthritis, hand nerve injury repair, carpal tunnel syndrome, bite injuries, wrist fractures (broken wrist), tennis elbow- lateral epicondylitis, pediatric orthopedics. Our hand surgeons also offer arthroscopy, joint replacement, on-site x-ray and are expert witnesses for court cases.

Lutherville - Main office | Bel Air | Clarksville | Pasadena | Westminster