Pain physician
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation of the Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex for Phantom Limb Pain.
Phantom limb pain (PLP) is a prevalent and distressing occurrence in 60-80% of individuals who have undergone amputations. Recent research underscores the significance of maladaptive cortical plasticity in the genesis of PLP, emphasizing the importance of targeting cortical areas for therapeutic interventions. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), a noninvasive tool for cortical stimulation, demonstrates effectiveness in treating various chronic pain conditions of neuropathic origin. Nevertheless, there exists a limited body of research investigating the application of rTMS as a therapeutic intervention specifically for managing PLP. Notably, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) plays a crucial role in central pain processing, suggesting its potential as a key therapeutic target in PLP treatment. There is a lack of adequate data regarding the effectiveness of DLPFC-targeting rTMS in alleviating the pain experienced by PLP patients. ⋯ A regimen of 10 sessions of real rTMS of the DLPFC was associated with significant pain relief in patients with PLP, and the effects were sustained for 2 months. Therefore, the present study shows that rTMS of the DLPFC has potential as an effective therapeutic intervention for sustained pain relief in PLP patients.
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Comparative Study
Comparing the Effectiveness and Safety of Dexamethasone, Methylprednisolone and Betamethasone in Lumbar Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injections.
Particulate steroids are thought to exert their effects for long durations at injection sites. However, these types of steroids carry higher risks when used in epidural steroid injections. Catastrophic spinal cord complications, including sudden-onset paraplegia, have been reported due to intravascular particulate steroid preparations that cause embolisms and occlusion of blood vessels, resulting in spinal cord infarctions. Clinicians, therefore, recommend nonparticulate steroids to mitigate these adverse events. To our knowledge, this is the first retrospective study that addresses the effectiveness and safety of methylprednisolone, dexamethasone, and betamethasone when used in transforaminal epidural steroid injections (TFESIs) for the treatment of lumbar radiculopathy. ⋯ Our study demonstrates that the clinical outcomes associated with TFESIs of nonparticulate steroids are superior to those associated with TFESIs of particulate steroids when either variety of medication is used to treat lumbar radiculopathy. This is the first study to include a clinically useful predictive model using information on laterality, age, and steroid type.
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The classic percutaneous balloon compression (PBC) technique is used to complete an operation under the guidance of C-arm radiography under general anesthesia, making communication with patients during the operation impossible. It is not accurate or objective to predict the classic technique's curative effect solely by determining whether the projection of the x-ray lateral image of the filled balloon is pear-shaped. ⋯ PBC can be completed under conscious local anesthesia and analgesia. Its curative effect and operative end standard can be determined according to the patient's chief concern. Under CT guidance, the puncture path can be designed to complete an accurate puncture and to intuitively understand the position and shape of the balloon.
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Observational Study
Development of Symptomatic Adjacent and Remote Level Compression Fractures Following Balloon-assisted Kyphoplasty in a Series of 1,318 Patients.
Balloon-assisted kyphoplasty (BAK) is a minimally invasive procedure to treat vertebral compression fractures (VCF). BAK not only restores vertebral height and corrects kyphotic deformity by cement augmentation, but it also may alter spinal biomechanics, leading to subsequent adjacent level VCFs. ⋯ Symptomatic post-BAK VCFs are infrequent and may occur long after the initial procedure. Nearly two-thirds of subsequent fractures in our study occurred adjacent to the initially treated level; almost every patient who suffered thoracic and lumbar fractures at the same time developed an adjacent level second fracture. Additionally, osteoporosis and chronic corticosteroid use were associated with adjacent level fractures in patients who underwent surgery for degenerative indications.
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A pain drawing is a self-administered assessment that requires the patient to shade in on a body chart the areas in which he or she experiences pain, regardless of the intensity. Pain drawings have already been validated in several adult populations. ⋯ Adolescents complaining musculoskeletal pain showed reliability in reporting pain extent and location using pain drawings.