• Minerva anestesiologica · May 2023

    Acute and chronic pain management in sport medicine: an expert opinion looking at an alternative mechanism-based approach to the pharmacological treatment.

    • Andrea Fanelli, Tommaso Laddomada, Massimiliano Sacchelli, and Massimo Allegri.
    • Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Polyclinic of Monza, Monza, Monza-Brianza, Italy.
    • Minerva Anestesiol. 2023 May 1; 89 (5): 468477468-477.

    AbstractIn the last decades there has been a huge increase in people who practice sports requesting an increase of the performance. Consequently, also incidence of acute and chronic pain is highly increased in this population of "healthy" people. Pain represents not only a signal of a lesion occurred during the sportive activity, but also (and almost) an unbalance of posture or an overuse of specific articulations or muscles, that has to be resolved not only with a correct physiotherapeutic approach, but also with a careful diagnosis of the complex mechanisms that sustain the pain. Furthermore, many drugs, commonly used in patients with acute pain, can cause side effects in people who practice sports, or they cannot be used as classified in the doping list. Hence, the pain therapist assumes a pivotal role in the management of pain in people who practice sports, for his skills in pain diagnosis, and for the possibility to introduce new mechanism-based therapies. In the last decade, these new therapies, such as regenerative medicine and peripheral neuromodulation, have demonstrated their effectiveness not only to reduce pain, but also to facilitate the healing process and the faster return to the sportive activity. In this expert opinion we summarize the most recent data to support this approach, focalizing not only on how to treat specific pain syndromes but also on how pain therapist could drive, through a careful diagnosis of the pain mechanism, to a new simultaneous mechanism-based disease modifying approach in people with pain practicing sport.

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