European journal of pain : EJP
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Using immunohistochemical methods we determined the presence of SP- and CGRP-immunopositive nerve fibers in the hip joint of patients with femoral neck fracture (controls, group 1), painful osteoarthritis (group 2), and painless failed total hip arthroplasties (group 3). Immunoreactive nerve fibers were found in the soft tissue of the fossa acetabuli as well as in the subintimal part of the synovial layer in the hip joint capsule of groups 1 and 2. In the capsule of controls the innervation density had a median of 5.7fibers/cm(2) for CGRP-ir and 3.2fibers/cm(2) for SP-ir afferents. ⋯ This is supported by the fact, that patients with loosened total hip arthroplasties, where we failed to detect SP- and CGRP-immunoreactive fibers, did not feel pain. The upregulation of SP- and CGRP-positive neurons in response to arthritic stages suggests a mechanism involving neuropeptides in the maintenance of a painful degenerative joint disease and in mediating noxious stimuli from the periphery. Furthermore, these findings help to explain clinical observations, such as effectiveness of local therapy to control hip pain with intraarticular injection, synovectomy and denervation procedures.
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Although information is available about the prevalence of pain in older adults in Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian countries, very little is known about older adults in other parts of the world. This study reports the prevalence of pain in a randomly selected sample of older adults living in the Mediterranean region of Catalonia. Besides studying the existence of pain at the time of interview, the authors investigated several characteristics of the participants' pain experience: pain onset, number and location of pain sites, intensity of pain, number of days in pain, severity of pain, the extent to which pain interfered with daily life, and expressed needs in relation to pain. ⋯ No clear pattern of the prevalence of regional pain was observed, although joints were the most frequently reported painful place. Pain interfered in the life of a considerable number of participants (35.5%), but no differences in the level of expressed needs was detected between those that were affected and those that were not. This study provides new evidence that pain is an important problem for the older adult, one that severely impacts on their health status, causing disability and reduced ability to function, particularly in older women.
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Measurement and conceptual issues of pain catastrophizing have been raised in the literature. The issues of construct redundancy and measurement overlap have received particular attention, with suggestions that measures of pain catastrophizing are confounded with measures of negative mood, namely depression. The current study sought to investigate these issues in the coping strategies questionnaire-catastrophizing subscale (CSQ-CAT), a widely used measure of pain catastrophizing. ⋯ This study suggests that the CSQ-CAT is highly related to measures of negative mood and raises doubts about its measurement of the construct of pain catastrophizing. Results also provide support for theoretical accounts of the relationships between pain catastrophizing, negative mood, and pain. Clinical implications, future research directions, and alternative measures of pain catastrophizing are discussed.