Pain medicine : the official journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine
-
The objective of the study was to conduct an analysis of pooled data from pregabalin fibromyalgia clinical trials to determine which fibromyalgia symptom and function domains drive patient perception of improvement. ⋯ Pain, fatigue, and sleep associate most strongly with improvement in PGIC. Physical- and work-related function also correlated with patients' overall assessment of improvement. These domains and their respective outcome measures can be used to improve assessment of patients' response to treatment.
-
It is generally well established that catastrophizing exerts a potent influence on individuals' experience of pain and accompanying emotional distress. Further, preliminary evidence has shown that meaningful differences among various pain relevant outcomes (e.g., pain ratings, endogenous pain inhibitory processes) can be attributed to individuals' ethnic background. The mechanisms that might explain ethnic differences in pain outcomes are unclear, and it remains to be fully established whether the relation between ethnicity and pain response may be indirectly affected by pain catastrophizing. ⋯ To better explicate our findings, we described the context in which these findings occurred following a "who, what, where, when, and why" approach. This approach provides an efficient description of how our findings align with previous research, while identifying future research that should clarify the theoretical underpinnings of catastrophizing and pain and also inform clinical intervention.
-
To describe the prevalence of hysterectomy for women aged 18-45 seeking treatment at a chronic pain clinic, to describe patient characteristics (pain intensity, age, smoking status, hormone replacement status, and psychosocial factors) based on opioid and hysterectomy status, and to determine whether hysterectomy status predicted receipt of opioid prescription. ⋯ Hysterectomy may confer risk for pain-related dysfunction and opioid prescription in women 45 and younger. More research is needed to understand 1) how patient characteristics influence prescribing patterns and 2) the specific medical risks and consequences of chronic opioid therapy in this population.
-
To evaluate the analgesic, physical, and psychological outcomes of percutaneous radiofrequency neurotomy for persistent zygapophysial and sacroiliac joint pain in a community setting. ⋯ Neurotomy of the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacroiliac joints were uniformly successful with 72% recipients obtaining an average of 86% reduction in pain for a period of 12 months.
-
The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence, mean age, and association of prevalence and age of lumbar internal disc disruption (IDD), facet joint pain (FJP), sacroiliac joint pain (SIJP), spinal and pelvic insufficiency fractures, interspinous ligament injury/Baastrup's Disease, and soft tissue irritation by fusion hardware. ⋯ Our data confirm the intervertebral disc as the most common etiology of chronic low back pain in adults. Based on our sample, the younger the patient, the more likely low back pain is discogenic in origin. Facetogenic or sacroiliac joint pain is more likely in older patients.