Articles: chronic-pain.
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To describe the characteristics of chronic noncancer pain (CNCP) patients taking oxycodone or its derivatives in a rural teaching practice. ⋯ Patients with CNCP in this rural teaching practice had significantly more health issues (P < .001) and were more likely to have a history of addiction than other patients were. They created more work with significantly more visits over the same period compared with the comparison group.
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Negative affects like depression, anxiety and stress are frequently observed in patients with fibromyalgia (FMS). Understanding the association between FMS and negative affects is likely to help in deciding the choice of treatment. The aim of this study was to determine the correlation between the severity of FMS with the severity of depression, anxiety and stress. ⋯ Results suggest that FMS is associated with depression, anxiety and stress and in FMS magnitude of negative affects is significantly correlated with FIQR. However, depression alone in absence of FMS can also give rise to all three components of FIQR.
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Physicians treating patients for chronic pain have limited means of determining whether a person is taking their medications as prescribed and are not taking extra medication. Complicating patient treatment regimens is the fact that pain physicians' prescribing practices may come under scrutiny by the Drug Enforcement Agency and other licensing agencies. If questioned, doctors can be hard-pressed to substantiate that their particular practices meet the established standard of care. It would be helpful to establish that their patients adhere to medications when compared with other practices. Previous studies show that urinary excretion data transformed by mathematical models can produce a reliable range of expected values for pain medications and may be useful to help resolve the aforementioned issues. ⋯ Expected urinary drug excretion values for morphine, hydrocodone, and oxycodone can potentially benefit pain physicians by showing that they are within the expected standard of care, helping to establish patient compliance, and identifying patients whose metabolism of these drugs may put them at risk.
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Recent developments in CBT emphasize the promotion of psychological flexibility to improve daily functioning for people with a wide range of health conditions. In particular, one of these approaches, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), has been studied for treatment of chronic pain. While trials have provided good support for treatment effectiveness through follow-ups of as long as seven months, the longer-term impact is not known. ⋯ Improvements in acceptance of pain and values-based action were associated with improvements in outcome measures. A "treatment responder" analysis, using variables collected at pre-treatment and shorter term follow-up, failed to identify any salient predictors of response. This study adds to the growing literature supporting the effectiveness of ACT for chronic pain and yields evidence for both statistical and clinical significance of improvements over a three-year period.
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Comparative Study
Subthreshold mood symptoms in patients with fibromyalgia and rheumatoid arthritis.
Although several findings have highlighted the prevalence of Axis I psychiatric disorders in fibromyalgia (FM) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA), very little information is available on the prevalence of subthreshold mood symptoms in these conditions. Therefore, we aimed at comparing the prevalence of subthreshold mood symptoms in rheumatic patients suffering from FM and RA. The hypothesis is that subthreshold mood symptoms are more represented in FM, given the evidence of higher rates of Axis I psychopathology in FM than in RA. ⋯ The present study demonstrates that subthreshold depressive symptoms are more represented in FM than in RA patients. This fact could play a role in the worse quality of life and in the major perception of pain which characterises FM.