Der Schmerz
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This review gives insight into the potential therapeutical role of cannabinoids in neurology. Preclinical data are presented which could give a rationale for the clinical use of cannabinoids in the fields of multiple sclerosis, spasticity, epilepsy, movement disorders, and neuroprotection after traumatic head injury or ischemic stroke. ⋯ At present, clinical data are insufficient to recommend the use of cannabinoids in any neurological disease as standard therapy. Several questions still have to be answered (which cannabinoid? which way of administration? stimulation of endogenous cannabinoids? separation between desired and undesired effects?), and controlled studies are still needed to clarify the potential therapeutical role of cannabinoids in neurology.
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The aim of our study was the analysis of the psychometric properties of the Ransford technique which is a qualitative scoring method of the pain drawing. It has been suggested that this method could be used as a brief screening technique for psychological involvement in pain complaints. ⋯ The pain drawing and the Ransford technique are not sufficiently sensitive and therefore allow no screening for psychological interference in complaints of back pain.
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The results of clinical studies have raised doubts on the effectiveness of regional sympathetic blocks with guanethidine (IVRSB) in patients suffering from complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS). We conducted a retrospective analysis of long-term results in our patients and searched for possible factors predicting long-term outcome after IVRSB: ⋯ We only seldom observed a complete functional restoration after CRPS. Male patients <60 years showed an increased risk of developing chronic pain. It remains unclear whether the risk of chronic pain reflects different responses to therapy or differences in the natural course of the disease in our patients. A meta-analysis of randomised trials of IVRSB in CRPS failed to prove the effectiveness of this intervention. If other investigations confirm our impression, future studies of CRPS-treatments should be planned and analysed with regard to the possible influence of the natural course and different risks of chronic pain among patients with CRPS.
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Sympathetically maintained pain is a symptom which occurs in neuropathic pain syndromes of different etiologies. From animal experiments it is known that nociceptive afferents after partial nerve lesions develop adrenergic sensitivity at the site of the injury. ⋯ Clinical studies support the idea that also in humans the application of adrenergic substances in pharmacological doses is capable to influence nociception, but a direct interaction between the sympathetic system and the nociceptive system had not been demonstrated so far. By using a thermal suit for whole body cooling and warming, which produces low and high activity of sympathetic vasoconstrictor neurons, it was possible for the first time to demonstrate an interaction between physiological changes in sympathetic activity and nociception.