Pain medicine : the official journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine
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Intrathecal therapy (ITT) for cancer pain is characterized by high initial cost followed by low maintenance costs. Non-ITT pain management is associated with steadily increasing cumulative cost that can equal the cost of ITT over time. The intent of this modeling project is to identify factors associated with relatively rapid achievement of cost-benefit with ITT. ⋯ In selected patients on high-cost opioid regimens, ITT may become cost-beneficial within 6 months. Factors associated with earlier attainment of ITT cost-benefit include the use of parenteral therapy, high-dose opioids, and the use of nongeneric opioid products.
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Patients with dementia, whose ability to provide self-report of pain is often impaired, are in crucial need of observers who can detect and judge the patients' pain-indicative behaviors appropriately, in order to initiate treatment. The facial display of pain promises to be especially informative for that purpose. The major aim of the study was to investigate, whether facial pain displays of patients with dementia can be as easily interpreted as facial displays of individuals without cognitive impairment and whether nurses have learned-through their professional training and work experience-to better read the facial display of pain compared with a control group. ⋯ Without further contextual information, "professional" observers do not show a superior competence in inferring pain in others by reading their facial display. Therefore, additional training seems needed to reliably prevent that pain goes unnoticed in patients with dementia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Predicting response to pregabalin from pretreatment pain quality: clinical applications of the pain quality assessment scale.
The aim of this study is to assess the Pain Quality Assessment Scale (PQAS) in predicting pregabalin in peripheral neuropathic pain (NP). ⋯ Pretitration PQAS scores reliably predicted pregabalin responders in patients with NP.
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Chronic pain and major depression have been associated with alterations of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) activity. Previous studies suggested that HPA activity is diminished in chronic pain but increased in depression. However, little is known about the effects of experimentally induced acute pain on cortisol secretion in patients with chronic pain and depression. ⋯ Across groups, experimental heat pain stimuli did not elicit a significant cortisol response. Chronic pain appears to be associated with low cortisol secretion. The mechanisms linking chronic pain with low cortisol deserve further study.
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Neuropathic pain is common and often difficult to treat because it generally does not respond well to the currently available pain medications or nerve blocks. Recent studies in both humans and animals have suggested that exercise may induce a transient analgesia and reduce acute pain in normal healthy individuals. We examined whether swim therapy could alleviate neuropathic pain in rats. ⋯ The results suggest that regular exercise, including swim therapy, may be an effective treatment for neuropathic pain caused by nerve injuries. This study, showing that swim therapy reduces neuropathic pain behavior in rats, provides a scientific rationale for clinicians to test the efficacy of exercise in the management of neuropathic pain. It may prove to be a safe and cost-effective therapy in a variety of neuropathic pain states.