European journal of pain : EJP
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A significant number of patients with Gaucher disease (GD) suffer from chronic or acute pain that reduces their quality of life. A mutation in lysosomal enzyme β-glucosidase (GCase) leads to an accumulation of glucocerebroside in the macrophage-lineage cells, causing the development of clinical symptoms. Novel studies have revealed that ambroxol (trans-4-(2-amino-3,5-dibromobenzylamino)-cyclohexanol), the well-known mucolytic drug, acts as a chaperone for the mutant, misfolded enzyme. ⋯ However, when the dose was increased up to 450mg/d, the intensity of pain diminished and subsided within the following months. Two of three attempts to reduce the dose of ambroxol resulted in a pain relapse within a week, which subsided after resetting the previous, higher dose. This observation of the effects of ambroxol in a GD patient is worth considering for other GD patients with chronic pain.
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Having to deal on a daily routine with prescriptions in adults with intellectual disability (ID), we systematically reviewed the literature on the specificities of pain interventions in that population, focusing on medication and trying to gather practical information on appropriate pain treatments. Given the scarcity of the literature on the topic, we also discussed the pharmacological considerations to be taken into account when prescribing analgesic drugs in that vulnerable population. ⋯ This review synthesizes the state of research on pain interventions in adults with ID and is one of the rare articles addressing the specificities of analgesic prescriptions in this population.
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Placebo effects are considered to be learning phenomena. There is a growing body of evidence supporting the role of both classical conditioning and observational learning in the induction of placebo effects. However, the third basic learning process, operant conditioning, was not considered as a mechanism of placebo effects until very recently. Unlike classically conditioned responses, which are induced by stimuli that precede the behaviour, operant behaviours are shaped and maintained by their consequences. Thus, placebo effects may not only result from pairing an active intervention with the stimuli that accompany its administration (placebo) but also positive (e.g. the ability to perform a desired activity) or negative reinforcement (e.g. pain relief) of placebo administration may increase the frequency of taking placebos in the future. The paper reviews the evidence supporting the idea of operant conditioning as a mechanism of placebo effects and discusses it in the context of the general principles of operant conditioning, the operant conditioning account of pain modulation and research findings on the role of operant conditioning in pain modulation. ⋯ The operant conditioning account of placebo effects is discussed from the theoretical perspective of the general principles of operant conditioning and the operant conditioning account of pain modulation. The paper identifies seven lines of research on the role of operant conditioning in producing placebo effects, and highlights the practical implications of the operant conditioning account of placebo effects both for routine clinical practice and the placebo arms of randomized controlled trials.