• Clin Neuropsychol · Jan 2013

    Review

    Risk factor assessment for problematic use of opioids for chronic pain.

    • Robert N Jamison and Robert R Edwards.
    • Pain Management Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA. RJamison@partners.org
    • Clin Neuropsychol. 2013 Jan 1;27(1):60-80.

    AbstractOpioid analgesics provide effective treatment for noncancer pain, but many health providers have concerns about cognitive effects, tolerance, dependence, and addiction. Misuse of opioids is prominent in patients with chronic pain and early recognition of misuse risk could help providers offer adequate patient care while implementing appropriate levels of monitoring to reduce aberrant drug-related behaviors. Many persons with chronic pain also have significant medical and psychiatric comorbidities that affect treatment decisions. Neuropsychologists can play an important role in the identification of psychological and social dysfunction and in matching personal characteristics to effective interventions as part of a multidisciplinary approach to pain management. The assessment of different domains using semi-structured interviews, sensory and neuropsychological testing, and standardized self-report measures permits identification of somatosensory, emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and social issues in order to facilitate treatment planning. In this review we discuss opioid abuse and misuse issues that often arise in the treatment of patients with chronic pain, and present an overview of assessment and treatment strategies that can be effective in improving outcomes associated with the use of prescription opioids for pain. Finally we briefly discuss the effect of opiate analgesics on cognition and review some intervention strategies for chronic pain patients.

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