The Clinical journal of pain
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The diagnosis and management of various HA syndromes in children and adolescents have been reviewed. The decision as to whether a child's HA is organic or functional may be a difficult one, but a thorough and systematic history and examination coupled with selected laboratory tests will usually guide the examiner to the correct diagnosis.
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Opioid receptors are described and differentiated by their affinities for specific agonists and antagonists. Their sites of action and receptor activities are discussed. Tachyphylaxis and tolerance are described and methods for overcoming these problems are recommended. Suggestions are made regarding future drugs to act at specific receptors.
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An updated review of patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) for acute pain relief in the postoperative period is presented. The technique, becoming more and more popular with patients, surgeons, and nurses, is undergoing numerous clinical trials under a variety of clinical protocols that are currently being reviewed. Benefits found with PCA include the fact that it is individualized therapy, allowing optimum drug titration; it decreases a patient's anxiety in the postoperative period; and it is a safer and more efficient technique of acute pain relief than conventional therapy. ⋯ Contraindications to the technique and most current equipment in use are listed herein. Clinical experience with PCA at Georgetown University Medical Center has provided, as has been the case elsewhere, data showing the superiority of the technique and its wide acceptance as part of the Acute Pain Service. The anesthesiologist plays a vital role in coordinating the various people and aspects involved in PCA for postoperative pain relief.
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Tyramine sulfoconjugation following an oral tyramine load was determined in 30 patients suffering from migraine and 14 controls not regularly suffering from headache. Reduced tyramine sulfoconjugation was found in those patients with a history of major depressive disorder compared with controls. When the patients with a history of major depression were removed from the analysis, no differences were found between diet-sensitive and non-diet sensitive migraine patients and controls.