The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A cost-effectiveness analysis of an internet-delivered pain management program delivered with different levels of clinician support: Results from a randomised controlled trial.
There is growing interest in the potential of internet-delivered pain management programs (PMPs) to increase access to care for people with chronic pain. However, very few economic evaluations of these interventions have been reported. Using existing data, the current study examined the cost-effectiveness of an internet-delivered PMP for a mixed group chronic pain patients (n = 490) provided with different levels of clinician support. ⋯ These findings suggest that carefully developed and administered internet-delivered PMPs, provided with different levels of clinician support, can be highly cost effective for patients with a broad range of pain conditions. PERSPECTIVE: This study examines the cost-effectiveness of an internet-delivered PMP provided to adults with a broad range of chronic pain conditions. Evidence of cost-effectiveness was found across a broad range of clinical outcomes and with different levels of clinician support.
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Despite a common assumption that reductions in chronic pain intensity must precede improvements in other pain-relevant domains, there has been limited empirical inquiry into the temporal ordering of improvements in chronic pain treatment. Cross-lagged models using retrospective clinical data examined relationships between average pain intensity and symptoms of psychological distress, difficulties with sleep initiation and maintenance, and disability in 666 treatment-seeking patients with chronic pain who demonstrated improvement in pain intensity (≥1-point reduction on 0-10 numeric rating scale) over a 1-year span. Results indicated that decreased difficulties with sleep initiation, depressive and anxious symptoms, and disability predicted later improvement in pain intensity, whereas greater pain intensity predicted only later difficulties in sleep initiation and maintenance. ⋯ The current findings should be replicated using prospective studies utilizing structured approaches to maximize data capture, as well as uniform interventional approaches to permit greater inferences regarding causal and temporal aspects of the model. PERSPECTIVE: This study demonstrates that pain intensity scores are not robust predictors of psychosocial outcomes longitudinally. Instead, other factors such as sleep initiation, psychological distress and disability appear to be important targets for intervention that may promote effective pain reduction.
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Analgesic tolerance to opioids contributes to the opioid crisis by increasing the quantity of opioids prescribed and consumed. Thus, there is a need to develop non-opioid-based pain-relieving regimens as well as strategies to circumvent opioid tolerance. Previously, we revealed a non-opioid analgesic mechanism induced by median nerve electrostimulation at the overlaying PC6 (Neiguan) acupoint (MNS-PC6). ⋯ This study suggests that MNS-PC6 is an alternative pain management strategy that maybe useful for combatting the opioid epidemic, and opioid-tolerant patients receiving palliative care. PERSPECTIVE: Median nerve stimulation relieves neuropathic pain in mice without tolerance and retains efficacy even in mice with analgesic tolerance to escalating doses of morphine, via an opioid-independent, orexin-endocannabinoid-mediated mechanism. This study provides a proof of concept for utilizing peripheral nerve stimulating devices for pain management in opioid-tolerant patients.
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Adequate analgesia can be challenging, as pharmacological options are not necessarily effective for all types of pain and are associated with adverse effects. Methadone is increasingly being considered in the management of both cancer-related and noncancer-related pain. The purpose of this article is to provide a narrative review of all available randomized controlled trials (RCTs) investigating the effectiveness of methadone in the management of pain, in relation to a comparison drug. ⋯ Future research should also aim to standardize reported outcomes for measuring analgesic effectiveness to permit for pooled analysis across studies. PERSPECTIVE: This article presents a systematic review, which includes a summary of published RCTs investigating the effectiveness of methadone in the management of pain. This is important for determining its analgesic utility and for identifying gaps in existing knowledge.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Transcranial direct current stimulation accelerates the onset of exercise-induced hypoalgesia: a randomised controlled study.
Exercise-induced hypoalgesia (EIH) describes acute reductions in pain that occur following exercise. Current evidence suggests that the magnitude of EIH is small-to-moderate at best, warranting exploration of novel avenues to bolster these effects. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been shown to relieve pain and represents a promising intervention that may enhance EIH. ⋯ PERSPECTIVE: These findings suggest that active tDCS accelerates the onset of EIH in healthy individuals experiencing experimentally-induced pain. This may represent a promising means of enhancing adherence to exercise protocols. However, larger randomised controlled trials in persistent pain populations are required to confirm the clinical impact of these findings.