Articles: low-back-pain.
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Thirty-six subjects participated in an 18-month follow-up of a secondary prevention program for back pain of recent onset. The follow-up assessment included most of the same instruments used in the original study. In addition, interviews were conducted to ascertain help and hindrance factors for maintaining improvements during the follow-up period. ⋯ A cost-benefit analysis indicated substantial economic savings when follow-up sick-listing data were compared with estimates based on an increasing trend for pain-related absenteeism found during the baseline period. Hindrance factors reported by subjects were related to personal time-management and workplace factors, especially psychosocial aspects of the work environment. It was concluded that the secondary prevention program was effective and that future maintenance programs should focus more on personal time-management and workplace factors.
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To assess the utilization of diagnostic and therapeutic medical services for the management of acute low back pain in a primary care setting, and to determine whether such utilization conforms to suggested guidelines for the management of this condition. ⋯ According to guidelines from the medical literature, the primary care physicians in this study both overutilized and underutilized diagnostic and referral services in cases of acute low back pain. It is necessary to determine whether underutilization of plain lumbar radiography adversely affects diagnostic accuracy and whether overutilization of other services improves important clinical outcomes, given the generally benign natural history of this condition.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Persistent low-back pain is real. However, diagnostic spinal injections are not helpful in its evaluation.
We endeavored to assess the short-term effects of intrathecal fentanyl and lidocaine in chronic-pain patients by ascertaining whether the opioid fentanyl, by virtue of its lack of sensory and motor paralysis, conferred any diagnostic advantages over lidocaine, a local anesthetic whose effects include sensory and motor paralysis. Neuraxial administration of fentanyl has been touted as an improved diagnostic tool to distinguish between peripheral and central pain, because the absence of sensory and motor effects may avert the patient's presumption of the onset of analgesia based on these cues. Twenty-two patients with persistent low-back pain, whose investigations had determined that they were not surgical candidates, were studied using a counter-balanced, placebo-controlled, and double-blinded crossover design. ⋯ There were no significant differences in the baseline median-pain scores among injection types. The baseline and best cerebrospinal fluid-pain scores were significantly different, suggesting a placebo effect. The best pain scores for fentanyl and lidocaine were superior to their own baseline levels and to the best cerebrospinal fluid scores.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Vitamins of the B group have long been used to treat neuropathies of different origins and the accompanying pain. A combination of the vitamins B(1), B(6), and B(12) prevents the slowing of impulse conduction produced by tetanic stimulation in diabetic mice. In patients suffering from diabetic neuropathy, B vitamins alleviate pain in the upper extremities. ⋯ It has recently also been reported that a combination of the vitamins B1, B6, and B12 has analgesic properties in non-neuropathic conditions. In animal experiments, B vitamins diminish nociceptive responses in spinal and thalamic neurones and potentiate the antinociceptive effect of analgesic agents. Similarly, B vitamins potentiate the therapeutic effect of diclofenac in patients suffering from acute low back pain.
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The effect of the presence of either chronic or acute clinical pain on pain threshold and on the nociceptive flexion reflex (RIII) threshold was studied. The experimental pain sensation and the flexion reflex were evoked by trains of short electrical pulses. It was hypothesized that both kinds of clinical pain would be able to induce 'diffuse noxious inhibitory controls' (DNIC) and thereby raise the 2 experimental thresholds. ⋯ The adaptation level theory offers an alternative explanation. Also, the acute postoperative pain in this study did not seem to induce DNIC. Because other forms of acute pain have been found to be effective in activating DNIC, future research should establish which pains are and which pains are not effective.