Pain medicine : the official journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The efficacy of transforaminal injection of steroids for the treatment of lumbar radicular pain.
Transforaminal injection of steroids is used to treat lumbar radicular pain. Not known is whether the route of injection or the agent injected is significant. ⋯ Transforaminal injection of steroids is effective only in a proportion of patients. Its superiority over other injections is obscured when group data are compared but emerges when categorical outcomes are calculated. Over time, the proportion of patients with maintained responses diminishes.
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To examine the development of analgesic tolerance in patients on oxymorphone extended-release (OxymER). ⋯ This post hoc analysis of oxymorphone ER consumption in osteoarthritis pain vs pain report showed that most dose changes occurred during an initial "titration period" as defined. Following this titration few subjects increased dose and analgesia remained stable. These findings suggest a lack of longitudinal opioid tolerance in the majority of those OA subjects who completed the trial.
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About 25% of the patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) suffer movement disorders, including loss of voluntary control, bradykinesia, dystonia, myoclonus, and tremor. These movement disorders are generally difficult to manage and add considerably to the disease burden. ⋯ These changes, in turn, set the stage for the development of movement disorders seen in CRPS. There are no randomized control studies on the treatment of movement disorders in CRPS but findings from fundamental and clinical research suggest that strategies that enhance the central inhibitory state may benefit these patients.
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Complex regional pain syndrome I (CRPS I) is defined by the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) criteria to include pain that is disproportionate to the inciting event, sensory disturbances such as allodynia/ hyperalgesia, autonomic dysfunction, and motor dysfunction that usually occurs after trauma that is frequently trivial and generally expressed in an extremity. These symptoms are well described in the adult population, but there are relatively few data or reports of its prevalence in the pediatric population. Recent studies have demonstrated that unlike the adult population, about 90% of the cases reported are females in a range of 8 to 16 years, the youngest being 3 years old. ⋯ Behavioral management is a mandatory accompaniment of any program of exercise therapy and the sometimes extreme sensory disturbances and parental enmeshment do distinguish the clinical presentation from that in the adult. Interventional procedures may be required in the face of extreme allodynia preventing exercise therapy, and in occasional cases interruption of the sympathetic nerves may reverse this symptom in a few children. Occasionally, continuous analgesia techniques such as that which can be delivered by tunneled epidural catheter or an externalized neurostimulator (spinal cord stimulation) for short periods of time are effective.
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Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) patients exhibit multiorgan pathology and inflammatory changes after limb trauma. The objective of this study was to identify how neuro-cutaneous signaling is facilitated after fracture and examine how this altered signaling contributes to the development of CRPS-like changes in the injured limb. ⋯ Collectively, these data suggest that neuro-cutaneous signaling is up-regulated and can mediate inflammatory changes observed in the hindpaw skin of the fracture rat model and in human CRPS skin. Future translational and clinical studies mapping these inflammatory changes may identify novel therapeutic targets for preventing post-traumatic pain from transitioning into chronic CRPS.