The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Withdrawal hyperalgesia after acute opioid physical dependence in nonaddicted humans: a preliminary study.
Hyperalgesia has been demonstrated to be a cardinal sign of physical withdrawal from opioids in preclinical models for more than 30 years, although few empirical data exist to support its occurrence in humans. In this preliminary study we used the acute opioid physical dependence (APD) model to test for the presence of hyperalgesia to experimental cold-pressor pain in 4 healthy non-opioid-dependent men via 3 different pretreatment opioid administration protocols previously demonstrated to induce APD (morphine 18 mg/70 kg intramuscular, morphine 10 mg/70 kg intravenous, hydromorphone 2 mg/70 kg intravenous), repeated on 2 separate occasions, and placebo. ⋯ Paired t tests comparing change scores between the opioid pretreatments and placebo showed that pain threshold and tolerance to the cold-pressor uniformly decreased across all APD induction methods, and the effect size was large (approximately 70% of baseline) and reproducible. These findings provide initial support for the existence of opioid-induced hyperalgesia, which has been conceptualized as a coexisting opponent process to opioid-induced analgesia and proposed to be an alternative explanation for the development of analgesic tolerance to opioids.
-
This study set out to examine whether gender or race influences physicians' pain management decisions in a national sample of 712 (414 men, 272 women) practicing physicians. Medical vignettes were used to vary patient gender and race experimentally while holding symptom presentation constant. Treatment decisions were assessed by calculating maximum permitted doses of narcotic analgesic (hydrocodone) prescribed for initial pain treatment and for follow-up care. ⋯ However, for persistent back pain, female physicians prescribed lower doses of hydrocodone, especially to male patients. For renal colic, lower doses were prescribed to black versus white patients when the patient was female, whereas the reverse was true when patients were male. These findings challenge a fairly extensive literature suggesting that physicians treat women and minorities less aggressively for their pain, and results offer further evidence that pain treatment decisions are influenced physician gender.
-
Clinical Trial
Stress influences the level of negative affectivity after forehead cold pressor pain.
The purpose of this study was to investigate simultaneously a stress manipulation and an experimental pain manipulation to determine how stress and pain interact to influence negative affectivity. One hundred healthy subjects completed a counterbalanced repeated measure crossover design in which stress (speech task) versus a nonstress control condition (magazine reading) was manipulated. Each session was immediately followed by a 2-minute forehead cold pressor task. ⋯ Regression analysis showed that the stress manipulation influenced the level of anger and that change in anger predicted post-pain negative affectivity independently of the contribution of maximum pain (model R(2) =.31), with 45% of the total model variance accounted for by change in anger and 17% of the total model variance accounted for by maximum pain intensity. In the nonstress condition only level of pain intensity was an independent predictor of negative affectivity (model R(2) =.16), with 69% of the total model variance accounted for by maximum pain intensity. These results show that stress significantly amplifies post-pain negative mood beyond that accounted for by the level of pain intensity alone.
-
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) inhibits nociceptive behavior in animals. VNS might reduce pain in patients with VNS device implanted for intractable seizures. One case report described possible benefits on migraines. ⋯ On Global Pain Relief Rating Scale, 1 patient reported complete pain relief, 2 reported a lot of pain relief, and 1 reported slight pain relief. Concomitant antiepileptic drugs were decreased in 3 patients and slightly increased in 1. VNS might be beneficial for prophylactic therapy of migraine.
-
Adaptive management of chronic pain depends to a large degree on how patients choose to cope with pain and its impact. Consequently, patient motivation is an important factor in determining how well patients learn to manage pain. However, the role of patient motivation in altering coping behavior and maintaining those changes is seldom discussed, and theoretically based research on motivation for pain treatment is lacking. ⋯ The implications of this model for enhancing engagement in and adherence to chronic pain treatment programs are then discussed. The article ends with a call for research to better understand motivation as it applies to chronic pain self-management. In particular, there is a need to determine whether (and which) motivation enhancement interventions increase active participation in self-management treatment programs for chronic pain.