Current opinion in supportive and palliative care
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Curr Opin Support Palliat Care · Dec 2018
ReviewBenzodiazepines for agitation in patients with delirium: selecting the right patient, right time, and right indication.
To provide an evidence-based synopsis on the role of benzodiazepines in patients with agitated delirium. ⋯ Benzodiazepines are powerful medications associated with considerable risks and benefits. Clinicians may prescribe benzodiazepines skillfully by selecting the right medication at the right dose for the right indication to the right patient at the right time.
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Compassion has been recognized as a key aspect of high-quality healthcare, particularly in palliative care. This article provides a general review of the current understanding of compassion in palliative care and summarizes emergent compassionate initiatives in palliative care at three interdependent levels: compassion for patients, compassion in healthcare professionals, and compassionate communities at the end of life. ⋯ Compassion can be enhanced through diverse methodologies at the organizational, professional, and community levels. This enhancement of compassion has the potential to improve quality of palliative care treatments, enhance healthcare providers' satisfaction, and reduce healthcare costs.
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Curr Opin Support Palliat Care · Dec 2018
ReviewHemato-oncology and palliative care teams: is it time for an integrated approach to patient care?
Integrated palliative care for those with advanced solid tumors yields significant benefits in patient and caregiver outcomes. However, most palliative care clinical trials have excluded patients with hematologic malignancies. There is growing interest in whether integrated palliative care may yield similar benefits in hematologic malignancy patients and caregivers, but there has been little direct evidence of benefit in this population. This review summarizes new data on palliative care issues in hematologic malignancies, published in the preceding 12 months. ⋯ Recent evidence confirms that hematologic malignancy patients have unique and often unmet palliative care needs, and also have worse end-of-life outcomes. More work is needed to develop and test integrated palliative care interventions in this population.
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Curr Opin Support Palliat Care · Jun 2018
ReviewChinese herbal medicines in the prevention and treatment of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting.
Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) critically impact on cancer patients' quality of life, causing various complications, and increasing the risk of chemotherapeutic failure. Current treatments addressing CINV are reasonably costly and have many side effects. Chinese herbal medicines (CHMs) have been widely used in treating CINV in China. Clinical trials and modern experimental studies on CINV using CHMs are reviewed for clues that may help us to better prevent and treat CINV with CHMs, and develop safe and effective treatments. ⋯ CHMs seem effective in the prevention and treatment of CINV based on the clinical trials and some animal experiments, although the scientific validity of many clinical studies remain to be confirmed as many of them were inadequately designed. Further well designed clinical trials and more preclinical studies with reliable markers are required to confirm the usefulness of CHMs as complementary medicines for treating CINV and to use CHMs as rational prescriptions rather than based only on empirical knowledge.
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Migraine is an extremely incapacitating collection of neurological symptoms that usually includes a severe, throbbing, recurring pain on one side of the head. The World Health Organization ranks migraine as the third most prevalent disease and the seventh commonest primary pain condition in the world. Trigeminovascular-mediated central sensitization has been implicated in the development of migraine symptoms including pain following light touch. This review explores the activation and sensitization of the brain systems that have emerged from recent studies and that contribute to migraine. ⋯ Several key studies have helped address the long-standing debate over whether migraine originates from vascular or neuronal dysfunction and now support that migraine is a neurological disorder. However, a complete understanding of the central nervous system dysfunction underlying this condition has yet to be elucidated.