Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Dec 1998
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialScreening for addiction in patients with chronic pain and "problematic" substance use: evaluation of a pilot assessment tool.
Assessing for the presence of addiction in the chronic pain patient receiving chronic opioid analgesia is a challenging clinical task. This paper presents a recently developed screening tool for addictive disease in chronic pain patients, and pilot efficacy data describing its ability to do so. ⋯ Responses of addicted patients significantly differed from those of nonaddicted patients on multiple screening items, with the two groups easily differentiated by total questionnaire score. Further, three key screening indicators were identified as excellent predictors for the presence of addictive disease in this sample of chronic pain patients.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Dec 1998
ReviewPeak plasma concentrations after oral morphine: a systematic review.
We performed a systematic review of 69 studies with information on 2146 subjects (454 patients and 1692 healthy volunteers) to examine the maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) and the time taken to reach maximum concentration (Tmax) for different oral morphine formulations, and to clarify factors contributing to variability. Data from healthy volunteers reflected that seen for patients but was less variable. There was minimal difference between single and multiple doses, suggesting no accumulation of morphine. ⋯ For controlled-release formulations, little difference was observed between brands. Only for once-daily formulations was there any difference in absorption between fed and fasted, with a Tmax for fed subjects considerably longer than for fasted. There was no evidence for any difference between values obtained by radioimmunoassay (RIA) or high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC).