Polskie Archiwum Medycyny Wewnętrznej
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Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Nov 2021
ReviewManagement of cancer pain: challenging the evidence of the recent palliative care opioid guidelines.
Opioid therapy is indisputably the mainstay of cancer pain management. However, important issues such as the worldwide variability in the availability and accessibility of opioids, myths and misconceptions about opioid use, and lack of knowledge about prescribing opioids among health care professionals have been pointed out by researchers, clinicians, and several health organizations. In an attempt to improve cancer pain management, guidelines for opioid use were elaborated to assist practitioners in prescribing opioids for the management of cancer-related pain. ⋯ Moreover, the increased frequency of prescribing opioids for chronic noncancer pain has raised other issues, such as iatrogenic adverse effects, which may also occur in patients with cancer pain on long-term opioid therapy (L-TOT). In this narrative review, we discussed the role of opioid guidelines and recent knowledge regarding the consequences of L-TOT, in particular opioid addiction and deficiencies of the immune and endocrine systems. Finally, we addressed new strategies to strengthen the L-TOT in the management of cancer-related pain among patients in palliative care.
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Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Nov 2021
ReviewFibrin clot properties in coronary artery disease: new determinants and prognostic markers.
Despite improved diagnosis and treatment options, coronary artery disease (CAD) is still the leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Established risk factors such as smoking, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertension only partly explain the pathophysiology of CAD. Besides the well-known role of platelets in atherosclerosis and arterial thrombus formation, reduced endogenous fibrinolytic activity may play a key role in CAD formation and progression. ⋯ We present today’s evidence on fibrin clot properties in patients with stable CAD or acute coronary syndrome compared with healthy individuals and the significance of altered fibrinolysis as a risk for coronary thrombotic disease. In conclusion, we found evidence that altered fibrin clot properties and impaired fibrinolysis appear to contribute significantly to the thromboembolic risk in CAD patients. Therefore, more research is crucial in order to clarify whether modulation of the fibrinolytic system may pave the way for improved treatment of CAD.