Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Intrathecal, but not intravenous adenosine reduces allodynia in patients with neuropathic pain.
Intrathecal adenosine reduces allodynia from intradermal capsaicin in human volunteers, and reduces hypersensitivity to mechanical stimuli in animals with nerve injury. Although both intrathecal and intravenous adenosine have been reported to relieve pain in patients with neuropathic pain, there are no controlled trials of this therapy. In order to determine the effect of adenosine, seven patients with chronic neuropathic pain and stable areas of mechanical hyperalgesia and allodynia were recruited. ⋯ Intrathecal, but not intravenous adenosine, caused backache in five of seven patients, lasting 6 h. These results indicate that intrathecal adenosine reduces allodynia and pain from stimulation in the area of allodynia, whereas the same dose of adenosine intravenously was ineffective. Given the modest effect and common side effects, the role for intrathecal adenosine as a sole agent for the treatment of neuropathic pain may be limited.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Potential utility of the peripheral analgesic properties of morphine in stomatitis-related pain: a pilot study.
To determine the potential clinical utility of peripheral opioid action using a clinical model of cancer treatment-induced inflammation and pain that allowed for topical application of morphine in the damaged tissue (oral mucosa). This pilot study followed a two blocks design. Ten patients with painful oral mucositis were enrolled in the first block (dose-response relationship finding) and randomized in two groups to receive oral rinses with 15 ml of either 1 per thousand or 2 per thousand morphine solution. ⋯ During our experiment no systemically active detectable concentrations of morphine were found (GC-MS analysis). The most important side effect attributable to morphine mouthwashes was burning/itching sensation (very mild to mild intensity). Patients with painful chemoradiotherapy-induced stomatitis could be alleviated using topical morphine mouthwashes.
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Patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) report chronic pain related to abnormal sensitivity of muscles that is reflected by so-called tender points (TP). TP represent areas of abnormal mechanical pain thresholds that have only shown a minor correlation with clinical pain of FMS patients and seem to be better suited for predicting distress. Pain-related negative affect (PRNA), abnormal temporal summation of second pain (termed wind-up or WU), and abnormal WU decay are frequently present in FMS patients. ⋯ Hierarchical regression analysis demonstrated that the combination of PRNA ratings, TP count, and WU decay ratings predicted 49.7% of the variance of clinical pain in FMS. This model demonstrates independent relationships of biological and psychological factors to clinical pain and underscores the important role of abnormal peripheral and central pain mechanisms for FMS. Therefore, the combination of PRNA, TP count, and WU decay may provide an excellent measure for future clinical studies of FMS patients.
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Comparative Study
Body motion during repetitive isodynamic lifting: a comparative study of normal subjects and low-back pain patients.
To quantify performance differences between patients with low-back pain (LBP) and a control group during their performance of a repetitive isodynamic lifting task. Case-control study was done. LBP patients were recruited and tested at an outpatient ambulatory chronic pain rehabilitation program before treatment was begun. ⋯ Patients and controls also differed significantly on dynamic measures, particularly lifting speed and hip and knee temporal midpoints. Major static and dynamic motion differences were found between LBP patients and controls as they performed repetitive lifting under a constant load. These findings indicate that body motion parameters, in addition to more common strength and endurance measures, are necessary to describe the impact of persistent LBP on a person's lifting abilities.
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Genetic polymorphisms result in absent enzyme activity of CYP2D6 (poor metabolizers, PM) in about 10% of the Caucasian population. This study investigates whether the PM genotype has an impact on the response to tramadol analgesia in postoperative patients. A prospective study design was used and 300 patients recovering from abdominal surgery were enrolled. ⋯ PM for CYP2D6 showed a lower response rate to postoperative tramadol analgesia than EM. Therefore, CYP2D6 genotype has an impact on analgesia with tramadol. Pharmacogenetics may explain some of the varying response to pain medication in postoperative patients.