Articles: chronic-pain.
-
Effective treatment of patients with trigeminal neuralgia is often a long and complicated procedure. The symptoms of trigeminal neuralgia are clearly defined in most cases. Sudden and brief episodes of severe and stabbing pain (tic douloureux) occur, with pain usually starting from a trigger point. Recent reports suggest 80-90% suppression of pain with various treatment regimens, which seems to indicate that the diagnosis and successful treatment of the disorder are no longer a major problem. In fact, however, the intense suffering of patients and isolated reports in the literature suggest that there are still considerable diagnostic difficulties. Patients are referred from one specialist to another, in most cases without the necessary interdisciplinary cooperation, and countless interventions and attempts at therapy not only remain unsuccessful, but may cause serious adverse effects. ⋯ Apparently there is a considerable need for more information about the clinical symptoms, cause, diagnosis and therapy of trigeminal neuralgia, especially as the symptoms are often no longer typical because they have become chronic or are the result of previous treatment. This is needed by all specialists involved, including dentists and general practitioners. In patients in whom clinical criteria suggest the diagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia, drug treatment should be initiated immediately in consultation with the neurologist or neurosurgeon. For cases in which drug treatment fails or resistance to the drug develops surgical treatments are available, such as non-destructive microvascular decompression or thermocoagulation of the gasserian ganglion.
-
From 1 August 1983 to 6 June 1992, 284 patients underwent decompression of the trigeminal root in the rear part of the skull as treatment for tic douloureux. According to preoperative diagnosis and intraoperative inspection, a space-occupying process was the cause of the typical neuralgia in 13 cases (4 meningiomas, 3 epidermoid tumours, 3 acoustic neuromas and 2 trigeminal neuromas). In 271 cases (95.4%) microsurgical vascular decompression according to Jannetta was carried out. ⋯ In summary, the long-term results confirm that microsurgical vascular decompression can be offered as the method of choice for treatment of trigeminal neuralgia in younger patients, and in older patients when cardiopulmonary risk factors and cerebrovascular processes can be eliminated. Alternative methods are high-frequency lesionsing of the gasserian ganglion according to Sweet and chemorhizolysis of the gasserian ganglion, but these must be restricted exclusively to the treatment of typical trigeminal neuralgia with tic douloureux. Persistent neuropathic pain caused by atraumatic or drug-induced lesion to the trigeminal nerve cannot be positively influenced either by surgical decompression or by destructive operations on the gasserian ganglion.
-
Analgesic pharmacotherapy represents one of the major approaches to the treatment of cancer pain, since it is used in almost every patient. A thorough evaluation of the physical and mental status of the patient and of the pain is as necessary as a sound understanding of the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic characteristics of the analgesics selected. The World Health Organization (WHO) has issued a basic 3 stage progression for the treatment of cancer pain, the "WHO Analgesic Ladder". ⋯ The most common of these is constipation; nausea, vomiting and sedation occur mostly at the start and can usually be treated effectively. The appropriate dosage, route of administration and dosage scheme of analgesics needs to be worked out for each individual patient in intensive work with the patient and a close follow-up, for years if necessary. Some analgesics may not be available in some countries, or only in specific preparations.
-
Studies indicate that work disabled chronic back pain patients out of work for longer than three months have a reduced probability of returning to work. The escalating personal and economic costs (indemnity and health care) associated with such long term disability have facilitated efforts at multiple levels to prevent and more effectively manage work disability. Multidisciplinary rehabilitation (MDR) targeted at return to work represents one such approach. ⋯ Research on predictors of return to work outcome following MDR were identified and included variables in five categories: demographics, medical history, physical findings, pain and psychological characteristics. The literature provides support for the use of integrated approaches that target the medical, physical, ergonomic and psychosocial factors that can exacerbate and/or maintain work disability. Future research should address current methodological limitations in the literature and focus on: 1) identifying critical treatment components of such approaches, 2) developing innovative screening methods to identify high risk cases to facilitate earlier more targeted efforts to assist such individuals, and 3) consider variations in the staging of various combinations of interventions in an effort to develop more cost-effective variations in the multidisciplinary approach.
-
A 21-year-old man suffered from diffuse low back pain and sciatica for 10-s periods once or twice a day over a period of 6 months. After this, pain became chronic and was resistant to conventional conservative treatment. Only acetylsalicylic acid diminished pain. ⋯ The time between onset of symptoms and final diagnosis was 18 months. Symptoms disappeared after surgery. Clinical and radiological aspects of the case are discussed.