Articles: back-pain.
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Intracutaneous sterile water appears to be a simple, effective, and harmless technique for relieving back pain. This technique has been used to relieve pain of renal colic, whiplash, and back pain in labour. Family doctors often practise obstetrics in small or isolated units that have limited options for pain relief in labour. This technique is simple, is easy to learn, and appears effective for relieving back pain, which complicates about one third of all labours.
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Dtsch. Med. Wochenschr. · Sep 1994
Review Case Reports[The interdisciplinary aspects of notalgia paraesthetica].
For 3 years a 75-year-old man with type II diabetes had been suffering from paroxysmal pruritus in a circumscribed area of brown discoloration of the skin over the left should blade. This condition, also known as notalgia paraesthetica, is a rare, but perhaps underdiagnosed, neurocutaneous entity, a largely sensory neuropathy due to a muscular compression phenomenon. ⋯ Purely symptomatic local capsaicin treatment decreased the pruritus temporarily. Endocrinological diagnosis failed to demonstrate multiple endocrine neoplasia (MEN) syndrome 2A, which has been frequently described in association with notalgia paraesthetica.
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Improved information on the natural history of back pain is needed to enable doctors and their patients to understand the likely course of back pain and to evaluate whether alternative interventions are preferred over self care or watchful waiting. The course of back pain is highly variable, occurring in transient, recurrent, and chronic phases. Recent longitudinal studies suggest that back pain is typically a recurrent condition and that chronic phases of back pain occur more often than previously believed. New methods of studying the course of back pain, standardized definitions of phases in the natural history of back pain, and improved outcomes data are needed to better understand the short-term and long-term course of back pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Long-term results of cervical epidural steroid injection with and without morphine in chronic cervical radicular pain.
To evaluate the long-term effectiveness of a single cervical epidural steroid injection (CESI) performed with or without morphine, 24 patients, without need of surgery, but suffering for more than 12 months from cervical radicular pain, were included in a prospective and randomised study. The cervical epidural space was injected (C7-D1; 18-ga needle) with an increasing volume (10 ml maximum) of isotonic saline solution to exacerbate the patient's radicular pain. The patients were then randomly allocated to 2 groups: the steroid group (group S, n = 14) received an equivalent volume of 0.5% lidocaine plus triamcinolone acetonide (10 mg/ml) and the steroid plus morphine group (group S + M, n = 10) received the same combination plus 2.5 mg of morphine sulphate. ⋯ Despite observing a better transient improvement the day after CESI in the S + M group, long-term results did not differ. The success rate was 78.5% in group S and 80% in group S + M providing pain relief of 86.8 +/- 14.7% and 86.9 +/- 17.9%, respectively. Pain relief remained stable with time (mean follow-up: 43 +/- 18.1 months).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)