The Clinical journal of pain
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Direct comparison of placebo effects on clinical and experimental pain.
Placebo effects have been suggested to be more potent on clinical than experimental pain. However, this proposition is based on the comparison of the magnitude of placebo analgesia between studies using different methodologies or between different groups of subjects within the same study. The authors sought to provide a more direct test of this hypothesis using a within-subject design and to investigate the potential mediating effect of expectancy. ⋯ The important reduction in placebo analgesia in low back pain after the single pre-exposure to the ineffective control treatment suggests the additional involvement of highly flexible mechanisms that may counteract the pro-analgesic effects of expectations.
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The purpose of this prospective cohort study with 1-year follow-up was to determine prognostic factors for duration of sickness absence due to musculoskeletal disorders. ⋯ High pain intensity is a major prognostic factor for duration of sickness absence, especially in low back pain. The different disease-specific risk profiles for prolonged sickness absence indicate that low back pain and upper extremity disorders need different approaches when applying intervention strategies with the aim of early return to work. The interaction of perceived physical workload with time suggests that perceived physical workload would increasingly hamper return to work and, hence, supports the need for workplace interventions among workers off work for prolonged periods.
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Clinical Trial
Pain and aberrant drug-related behaviors in medically ill patients with and without histories of substance abuse.
This study evaluated the prevalence and correlates of aberrant drug-taking behaviors in two populations: patients with HIV-related pain and a history of substance abuse (n = 73) and patients with cancer pain and no history of substance abuse (n = 100). ⋯ These data suggest that AIDS patients with histories of substance abuse receiving opioid therapy are more symptomatic, have more distress, experience more interference from residual pain, and engage in more problematic drug-related behaviors than patients with no history of drug abuse receiving opioids for cancer pain. Treatment of substance abusers with pain requires skills that complement best practices in opioid prescribing. Better approaches to the long-term treatment of these populations are needed.
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Case Reports
Warning headache of subarachnoid hemorrhage and infarction due to vertebrobasilar artery dissection.
The authors describe the clinical features of headache in patients with vertebrobasilar artery dissection (VBAD) and emphasize the importance of recognition of warning headaches preceding subarachnoid hemorrhage. Headache in VBAD is already recognized, but the natural history and clinical features of the warning headache have not been well elucidated. ⋯ The present study confirms a high frequency of headache in patients with VBAD. Sudden severe occipital and nuchal pain, even without subarachnoid hemorrhage or any neurologic deficit, should be considered as a warning sign of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and magnetic resonance angiography should be performed urgently for screening of patients with a warning headache to prevent resultant life-threatening major vascular events.
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To study whether the sensitivity to noxious and innocuous heat varies across the body. ⋯ The sensitivity to noxious heat is uniform across the body when measured with a reaction-time-free method (Method of Levels), but is greater in proximal than in distal regions, when measured with a reaction-time-dependent method (Method of Limits). Regardless of measuring method, the sensitivity to innocuous heat is not uniform across the body. It is concluded that the Method of Levels is preferred when heat-pain threshold is to be compared between body regions. For heat-pain threshold, within-patient comparisons can be made between each pair of regions tested. However, for warm sensation threshold, within-patient comparisons should be conducted between contralateral symmetrical regions.