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An Open and Double-Blind Cross-Over Study on the Efficacy of Clomipramine (Anafranil®) in Patients with Painful Mono- and Polyneuropathies

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1982

Year

Abstract

82 patients with chronic pain resulting from mononeuropathy were treated with psychotropic drugs in an open therapeutic study. In this study we found that treatment with a combination of clomipramine (Anafranil) and small doses of neuroleptics was significantly superior to therapy with neuroleptics alone. In a subsequent double-blind study, it was attempted for the first time to determine the efficacy of clomipramine compared to that of acetylsalicylic acid in 48 patients with painful mono- and polyneuropathies. The test was carried out in a cross-over trial with two sequence groups. We evaluated assessments of pain by both patients and doctors, and were able to prove statistically that clomipramine possesses a significantly greater efficacy compared to that of acetylsalicylic acid. By taking into account recent anatomical, biochemical and pharmacological studies, it can be concluded that clomipramine probably has-in addition to the action on peripheral receptors-a direct effect upon pain modulation systems. It seems possible that clomipramine activates serotonin-containing neurons of the endorphin-mediated analgesia system that control pain transmission in the CNS.