Articles: treatment.
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While drug therapy is one of the most commonly used modalities of treatment in managing persistent or chronic pain, controversy continues with regards to the appropriate use of controlled substances, specifically opioid analgesics, in interventional pain medicine settings. This study included 100 randomly selected patients receiving opioids in an interventional pain medicine setting. The patient's controlled substance profile was evaluated using multiple means. ⋯ There were no significant differences noted either in demographic characteristics or psychological characteristics, except for a higher prevalence of depression in the abuse group. In conclusion, there was significant abuse of opioids in an interventional pain medicine setting, with an incidence of 24%, with frequent abuse seen in almost half of these patients. Thus, it is important for interventional pain physicians to recognize this possibility and also to recognize that there is no definite physiologic, psychologic or demographic information to suggest abuse, even though depression was more prevalent in abuse patients.
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The increasing proportion of elderly patients, coupled with increasing longevity, causes the problem of lumbosacral pain secondary to spinal stenosis of the lumbar spine to be an important issue. Symptoms of spinal stenosis are caused by entrapment and compression of intraspinal vascular and nervous structures; which may lead to inactivity, loss of productivity, and potential loss of independence, particularly in the elderly. Surgical decompression is considered as the natural treatment. ⋯ The results showed significant improvement with reduction of pain; with improvement of physical health, mental health, and functional status. Improvement in psychological status was also noted, with decrease in narcotic intake. Epidural adhesiolysis with hypertonic saline neurolysis is a safe and probably effective modality of treatment in managing symptomatic moderate to severe lumbar spinal canal stenosis.
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To clarify case mix, mode of transport and reasons for interfacility transfer from rural emergency departments (EDs) and to make recommendations for improved emergency health care delivery in rural settings. ⋯ These data suggest that rural family physicians may benefit from increased orthopedic and pediatric training and support. The study also identified a need for increased specialist availability in our rural setting. The high number of transfers for CT scans suggests that some rural health regions should consider acquiring a "regional" CT scanner. The development of a regional hospital, with a CT scanner and specialist resources, especially a general surgery on-call system, would reduce the need for transfer outside the region.
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A U.S. Food and Drug Administration ruling required clinical trials to evaluate the safety and efficacy of deep brain stimulation devices, thereby limiting treatment to the investigational setting. ⋯ Deep brain stimulation has not been shown to produce effective long-term pain relief. Future studies of motor cortex stimulation and similar therapies will require appropriate control groups and accepted methods of data collection and analysis to support claims that predictable and reliable analgesic effects are produced in humans.
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This report illustrates that genitofemoral neuralgia can result from laparoscopic inguinal herniorrhaphy and offers a management strategy for this pain syndrome. ⋯ Recognition and proper diagnosis of genitofemoral neuralgia after laparoscopic herniorrhaphy may result in appropriate therapy and hasten recovery.