First of all, we would like to thank our colleague for his comments on our article on predictors of sympathetic blockade (SB) in the management of complex regional pain syndrome type 1.1In our study protocol, patients were treated with a conservative therapy protocol, as described in evidence-based guidelines.2In this treatment protocol, corticosteroids, although there is some evidence for their use, were not recommended because of limitations in the methodological quality of the available studies and lack of specifications on dose and duration of therapy. Gabapentin was chosen above amitriptyline because although the latter is a first-line choice treatment of neuropathic pain, there are no controlled studies in complex regional pain syndrome type 1 to support this choice. For gabapentin, the dose of 1,800 mg daily for a duration of only 3 weeks proved effective in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study in 58 complex regional pain syndrome type 1 patients.3The aim of our study was to determine predictors that would help us identify patients who responded favorably to SB. The time between the index event and the SB is an important predictive factor for treatment success. Therefore, patients in our study needed to be treated as early as possible with SB in order to increase the number of patients with a positive response after SB.4At the time of the initiation of the study, the interventional pain management techniques were recommended after a failed trial of 2–4 weeks with any particular therapy.5If we would have treated patients with a more extensive medical therapy protocol, as suggested by Neil, this would inevitably lead to a much longer duration of the conservative treatment protocol. Moreover, diagnosis usually is made several months after the initiating event. A longer duration of conservative treatment may diminish the number of patients who would respond to SB. Nonetheless, we agree with our colleague that a rigorous and multimodal rehabilitation protocol, comprising medicinal interventions as well as physiotherapeutic modalities, is essential for a disease as involved as complex regional pain syndrome. The results of our study, which reveal limited efficacy of sympathetic blockade and lack of clear predictors for a positive response, lends further support to this assumption. Although we are convinced that the therapy provided before the sympathetic blockade was up to standard, we cannot exclude the possibility that the use of other treatment modalities before the interventional procedure might have resulted in a different patient sample participating in this study, and therefore to other outcomes.

1.
van Eijs F, Geurts J, van Kleef M, Faber CG, Perez RS, Kessels AG, Van Zundert J: Predictors of pain relieving response to sympathetic blockade in complex regional pain syndrome type 1. ANESTHESIOLOGY 2012; 116:113–21
2.
Perez RS, Zollinger PE, Dijkstra PU, Thomassen-Hilgersom IL, Zuurmond WW, Rosenbrand KC, Geertzen JH, CRPS I Task Force: Evidence based guidelines for complex regional pain syndrome type 1. BMC Neurol 2010; 10:20
3.
van de Vusse AC, Stomp-van den Berg SG, Kessels AH, Weber WE: Randomised controlled trial of gabapentin in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome type 1 [ISRCTN84121379]. BMC Neurol 2004; 4:13
4.
Ackerman WE, Zhang JM: Efficacy of stellate ganglion blockade for the management of type 1 complex regional pain syndrome. South Med J 2006; 99:1084–8
5.
Burton AW, Hassenbusch SJ 3rd, Warneke C, Racz G, Stanton-Hicks M: Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS): Survey of current practices. Pain Pract 2004; 4:74–83