Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Cost effectiveness of two rehabilitation programmes for neck and back pain patients: A seven year follow-up.
The cost effectiveness of work-oriented rehabilitation for persons on long-term sick leave needs to be assessed. This prospective observational study presents a follow-up seven years after rehabilitation using two different evidence-based work-oriented regimens. Individuals on sick leave for neck and back pain were referred to two rehabilitation programmes in Sweden. ⋯ The results of this study show that MPD but not OMTP achieves the goal of working life-oriented rehabilitation. A direct comparison between the rehabilitation programmes strengthened the assumption that long-term sickness absence prior to rehabilitation is associated with more days on sick leave after rehabilitation. This analysis also indicated the importance of participants' pain self-efficacy beliefs and recovery beliefs on rehabilitation outcome.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A randomized clinical trial of a brief hypnosis intervention to control venepuncture-related pain of paediatric cancer patients.
Venepuncture for blood sampling can be a distressing experience for a considerable number of children. A prospective controlled trial was conducted to compare the efficacy of a local anaesthetic (EMLA) with a combination of EMLA with self-hypnosis in the relief of venepuncture-induced pain and anxiety in 45 paediatric cancer outpatients (age 6-16years). A secondary aim of the trial was to test whether the intervention will have a beneficial effect on parents' anxiety levels during their child's procedure. ⋯ The therapeutic benefit of the brief hypnotic intervention was maintained in the follow-up. The present findings are particularly important in that this study was a randomized, controlled trial conducted in a naturalistic medical setting. In this context, convergence of subjective and objective outcomes was reached with large effect sizes that were consistently supportive of the beneficial effects of self-hypnosis, an intervention that can be easily taught to children, is noninvasive and poses minimal risk to young patients and their parents.
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TNFalpha plays a pivotal role in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) but little is known of the mechanisms that link the inflammatory and nociceptive effects of TNFalpha. We have established a murine model of TNFalpha-induced TRPV1-dependent bilateral thermal hyperalgesia that then allowed us to identify distinct peripheral mechanisms involved in mediating TNFalpha-induced ipsilateral and contralateral hyperalgesia. Thermal hyperalgesia and inflammation were assessed in both hindpaws following unilateral intraplantar (i.pl.) TNFalpha. ⋯ However, TNFalpha-induced IL-1beta generation in both paws and the presence of local IL-1beta in the contralateral paw were essential for the development of bilateral hyperalgesia. These results identify a series of peripheral events through which TNFalpha triggers and maintains bilateral inflammatory pain. This potentially allows a better understanding of mechanisms involved in TNFalpha-dependent pain pathways in symmetrical diseases such as arthritis.
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Diffuse noxious inhibitory controls (DNIC) are very powerful long-lasting descending inhibitory controls, which are pivotal in modulating the activity of spinal and trigeminal nociceptive neurons. The principal feature of DNIC is that they are subserved by a loop that involves supraspinal structures that have not yet been identified. Using behavioral, in vivo extracellular electrophysiological and anatomical approaches, we studied the neuronal network underlying DNIC. ⋯ We show that inactivating the lateral parabrachial area - by microinjecting the GABA(A) agonist, muscimol - strongly attenuates DNIC-induced inhibition of C-fiber-evoked responses. Finally, our neuroanatomical tracing study demonstrates that the descending pathway for DNIC does not involve direct descending projections from the PB area. We conclude that (1) lamina I/III spinoparabrachial neurons that express the NK1 receptor and (2) parabrachial neurons are involved in the ascending part of the loop underlying DNIC and that the descending pathway for DNIC might include indirect projections to the spinal or medullary dorsal horn.