The Clinical journal of pain
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A reliable, safe approach to achieving unilateral anesthesia in multiple contiguous thoracic dermatomes would be of great benefit to anesthesiologists in the acute and chronic pain setting. The multidermatomal intercostal technique is one such approach, although the anatomical mechanism of this nerve block is a matter of debate. At our pain clinic, we have used another technique, a modification of the paravertebral block, to achieve multiple segments of unilateral sensory blockade. ⋯ In order to clarify the mechanism of bilateral blockade resulting from a unilateral technique, we injected four fresh cadavers with colored latex solution using the paravertebral-peridural approach. This revealed spread of the latex across the midline prevertebrally to the contralateral paravertebral space. We conclude that the paravertebral-peridural thoracic block is a reliable, safe technique for achieving unilateral anesthesia over multiple dermatomes with a single injection.
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Forty patients (ASA status I-III) recovering from major orthopedic or gynecological operations were investigated to evaluate analgesic efficacy and threshold concentrations of tramadol and its main metabolite O-demethyltramadol (M1) in serum during the early postoperative period, using patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) by means of the Abbott Lifecare Infuser. Following an individualized intravenous loading dose of 97.5 +/- 42.3 mg (mean, SD), tramadol demand doses were 20 mg with a limit of 500 mg within 4 h; the lockout time was set to 5 min. The duration of PCA was 20.5 +/- 4.8 h. ⋯ Minimum effective tramadol serum concentration (MEC) varied greatly and could be best described by a log-normal distribution (range 20.2-986.3 ng/ml, median 287.7 ng/ml). Intraindividual MEC variability was lower than intersubject variability (38.2 vs 59.1%). Median M1 concentrations were 36.2 ng/ml.
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It is well established that multiple influences regulate cerebral blood flow; the overwhelming evidence continues to suggest that migraine is a disorder, albeit temporary, of cerebral hemodynamics. Thus, the classical theory of migraine is no longer tenable as viewed strictly and rigidly. Perhaps it would be easier to say that the migraine's aura is characterized by reduction in blood flow, often hemispheric, and that sometime during the headache phase cerebral hyperperfusion occurs. ⋯ The blood flow changes do not necessarily correlate with the patient's symptoms. Thus, even now, migraine and other vascular headaches remain as descriptive diagnoses. The final pathology of migraine remains to be determined.
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Comparative Study
Acupuncture treatment in epicondylalgia: a comparative study of two acupuncture techniques.
The purpose of this study was to compare the pain-alleviating effect of classical acupuncture with superficial needle insertion in 82 patients suffering from lateral epicondylalgia. Sessions were 20 min long, two to three times weekly with 10 treatments in all. ⋯ No such differences could be observed at the follow-ups after 3 months and 1 year. This study showed that classical "deep" acupuncture is superior to superficial needle insertion in the short-term symptomatic treatment of lateral epicondylalgia, but not at 3- and 12-month follow-up.
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A postal survey aimed at studying the prevalence of chronic pain and the need for care because of pain was carried out in a representative sample of a Swedish population. A random sample of the study population has been interviewed and assessed clinically to determine whether a questionnaire method gives the same results as clinical assessment. ⋯ By creating questions more independent of language habits and values, it was shown that it is possible to get better agreement between different descriptions. The best agreement was shown when answers to questions regarding different dimensions of pain were combined in a model for selecting individuals with more serious pain problems.