Pain physician
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Excluding a vascular origin of exercise-related pain is often difficult in clinical practice. Recent papers have underlined the frequent association of concurrent lumbar spine degenerative disease and peripheral arterial disease. Furthermore, even when suspected, isolated exercise-induced proximal ischemia is difficult to diagnose. Measurement of transcutaneous oxygen pressure (tcpO2) is an interesting and accurate method to differentiate proximal (buttock) from distal (calf) regional blood flow impairment (RBFI) during exercise. ⋯ Isolated proximal-without distal RBFI is found in approximately one out of 7 patients complaining of symptom limiting claudication with a borderline or normal resting ABI. Exercise-tcpO2 may help to discriminate patients with arterial claudication that could benefit from invasive vascular investigations and procedures.
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Although headache is the most common complication of dural puncture, knowledge gaps remain about patient-related risks. Data are lacking on the role, if any, of tobacco smoking, race, anxiety, depression, and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in conferring risk for post-dural puncture headache (PDPH). ⋯ Most notably, smokers had a considerably reduced rate of PDPH in comparison with non-smokers. This information could be a useful addition to the clinical assessment of relative risk for PDPH. Further research into the mechanisms by which tobacco smoking may inhibit PDPH, such as nicotine stimulation of dopamine neurotransmission or alterations in coagulation, appears warranted.
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Prescription opioid abuse is not homogeneous due to varying patterns of use and different geographic preferences. Because doctor shopping is one of the main sources of diversion, it has previously been used to estimate drug abuse. ⋯ These results confirm important variations in the 3 French regions despite them being geographically close. Besides, they highlight different rates of opioid abuse between opioids for mild to moderate pain, opioids for moderately severe to severe pain, and opioid maintenance treatments, as well as differences within these groups.
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Clinical Trial
Effectiveness of percutaneous transforaminal adhesiolysis in patients with lumbar neuroforaminal spinal stenosis.
Lumbar foraminal spinal stenosis (LFSS) is a narrowing of the bony exit of a nerve root, which causes mechanical compression of spinal nerve roots. Low back pain and/or leg pain, and possibly neurogenic claudication, may result due to mechanical neural compression. Transforaminal epidural steroid injections (TFESIs) are commonly used for treating LFSS. Patients refractory to TFESIs may benefit from percutaneous epidural adhesiolysis. ⋯ Short-term results indicate that percutaneous TFA is an effective treatment for LFSS, although therapeutic outcomes and the severity of LFSS showed no correlation.
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Microsurgery for lumbar herniated discs that require surgical intervention is a very successful and well-described technique, whether performed through more traditional "open" microsurgical retractors or through minimally-invasive "tube" retractors. Surgery for extruded lumbar disc fragments that migrate caudad or cephalad from the disc origin may typically require modifying the standard hemilaminotomy by removing additional laminar bone to retrieve the migrated fragment. Although midline and paramedian Wiltse approaches have been the standard methods for resecting herniated lumbar disc fragments, advances in neuroendoscopic techniques have expanded the potential targets for transforaminal endoscopic treatment to include extruded lumbar disc fragments. ⋯ Although more traditional lumbar disc surgery is widely performed and is safe and effective, neuroendoscopic procedures may also allow a safe and effective approach for even extruded disc fragments for patients who cannot tolerate general anesthesia or are seeking the most minimally invasive option. Endoscopic discectomy is a minimally invasive alternative to open back surgery. Maintained spinal stability and absence or minimal formation of scar tissue allow for ease of subsequent surgeries, both open and minimally invasive (if needed).