Articles: back-pain.
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An outpatient treatment programme for pain control was applied in 25 chronic pain patients in three general medical practices, supervised by a medical psychologist as a group therapist. The patients has been suffering from headaches, migraines, cervical pain, shoulder and arm pain, and low back pain for at least 6 months. A sample of 20 patients with the same disorders served as a control group which waiting for treatment. ⋯ Nonetheless, all the subjects treated showed improvements in their average scores for trait anxiety, depression and symptoms complaints compared with the untreated controls. Our results indicate a long-term improvement in well-being as a result of the treatment. Treatment adherence seems to be the most important factor in the maintenance of long-term reduction of pain intensity.
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During the 1960s, it was observed that the tricyclic antidepressant imipramine was effective in the treatment of neuralgia, myalgia, and pain in carcinoma. Similarly, in other studies, clomipramine was also found to have an analgesic effect. The sedative antidepressant amitriptyline has proved effective in migraine prophylaxis, chronic tension headache, and psychogenic musculoskeletal and neuralgic facial pain. ⋯ The remaining tricyclic and the tetracyclic antidepressants have not been sufficiently well evaluated. This is also true of monoamine oxidase inhibitors, of which individual reports to date suggest are probably also effective as analgesics. A scientific investigation into the possible differences in the effectiveness of various antidepressants in specific chronic pain conditions is an important task for the future.
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One hundred and ten outpatients with either acute or chronic low-back pain completed the McGill Pain Questionnaire, Beck Depression Inventory, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and Life Experiences Survey. Acutes and chronics did not differ on dimensions of pain, but significant correlations between pain dimensions and depression and state anxiety were found for chronics. ⋯ Combined scores on depression, anxiety, and negative life change predicted sensory and affective pain for the pooled sample. These results confirm the role of psychological variables in the experience of clinical pain and underscore the highly affective nature of chronic pain.
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Low back pain is one of the commonest disorders, yet is the most confusing. The cost in work-time lost and in the search for and treatment of its many causes amounts to billions of dollars annually. The traditional techniques for anatomic visualization have been plain-film radiography and myelography, but they have limitations. ⋯ However, invasive procedures, such as discography, percutaneous nerve-root blocking and percutaneous facet injection, may be helpful in patients with disabling pain in whom noninvasive methods give negative findings, show abnormalities that do not correlate with the symptoms or identify multiple sites of disease. The invasive procedures are believed by some to be associated with too many complications. We have attempted to clarify the strengths and weaknesses of the currently available methods of investigating low back pain and the indications for their use.