Articles: acute-pain.
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The bidirectional relationship between pain and working memory (WM) deficits is well-documented but poorly understood. Pain catastrophizing-exaggerated, negative cognitive and emotional responses toward pain-may contribute to WM deficits by occupying finite, shared cognitive resources. The present study assessed the role of pain catastrophizing as both a state-level process and trait-level disposition in the link between acute pain and WM. ⋯ Future research should replicate these results in chronic pain samples, investigate other potential mechanisms (e.g., sleep disturbances), and determine if interventions that target pain catastrophizing directly can ameliorate cognitive deficits in people with pain. PERSPECTIVE: This article presents a laboratory study examining the relationships among pain, pain catastrophizing, and working memory in healthy participants. The results shed new light on these relationships and raise the possibility that interventions that reduce catastrophizing may lead to improved cognitive function among people with pain.
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Nonopioid analgesics are frequently used for perioperative analgesia; however, insufficient research is available on several practical issues. Often hospitals have no strategy for how to proceed, e.g., for informing patients or for the timing of perioperative administration of nonopioid analgesics. ⋯ The use of nonopioid analgesics as part of a perioperative multimodal concept should be approved and established as an interdisciplinary and interprofessional concept for the adequate treatment of postoperative pain.
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Acute pain is the main complication of sickle cell disease. Chronic pain (CP) and neuropathic pain (NP) may also be experienced, but have not been formally described in Jamaican patients. A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine their prevalence and characteristics, and to determine the common pain locations and modalities of management. ⋯ CP and NP should be assessed during routine care of sickle cell pain so that targeted therapies can be applied.
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Perceived injustice (PI), which is one's appraisal of justice or fairness regarding the pain experience, is an emerging area of interest in pediatric pain research. No previous studies have investigated PI in youth with acute pain. To fill this gap, this study examined (1) associations among PI, pain-related function, and psychological function in treatment-seeking youth with acute musculoskeletal (MSK) pain, and (2) the impact of parent-child PI discordance on children's pain and psychosocial function. ⋯ These findings reveal that PI in youth with acute MSK pain is associated with quality of life and pain-related disability. Furthermore, results highlight the importance of discordance between youth and parent reports of PI on pain-related functioning.