Articles: pain-clinics.
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To provide a mechanism-based acute pain management strategy for early phantom limb pain following traumatic amputations and to collect first evidence of its acute and potentially preventative effects on the formation and maintenance of phantom limb pain. The combination of continuous brachial plexus analgesia and prolonged block of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors over 4 weeks aimed to attenuate peripheral and central sensitization, currently thought to be substantially involved in establishing and maintaining phantom limb pain. ⋯ The combination of long-term regional analgesia with prolonged block of NMDA receptors might be effective for treatment and prevention of phantom limb pain following traumatic amputations. The absence of clinically relevant side effects, together with maintained motor function suggests this treatment to be a promising preventive strategy for phantom limb pain following traumatic amputations.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Chronic daily headache in children and adolescents presenting to tertiary headache clinics.
Adults with chronic daily headache often describe a transformation from episodic migraine and partial retention of migrainous features. Although chronic daily headache has not been investigated as carefully in the pediatric population, one study showed a predominance of coexisting daily headache and episodic migraine, without a clear history of transformation. ⋯ Our data suggest that rather than having two coexistent headache types, children and adolescents with chronic daily headache have a single syndrome that, in many cases, will paroxysmally worsen and gather migrainous features.
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Spinal cord stimulation is the most common mode of neuromodulation used in managing chronic low back pain. It is minimally invasive and reversible as opposed to nerve ablation. The basic scientific background of the initial spinal cord stimulation trials was based on the gate control theory of Melzack and Wall. ⋯ There is substantial scientific evidence on the efficacy of spinal cord stimulation for treatment of low back and lower extremity pain of neuropathic nature. Clinical studies revealed a success rate of from 50% to 70% with spinal cord stimulation, with decreased pain intensity scores, functional improvement and decreased medication usage. This review discusses multiple aspects of spinal cord stimulation, including pathophysiology and mechanism of action, rationale, indications, technique, clinical effectiveness, and controversial aspects.
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Many commissions and groups throughout the world have proposed clinical guidelines on the management of low back pain, spinal pain, and chronic pain. Practice guidelines are systematically developed statements to assist the practitioner and patient decisions about appropriate healthcare for specific clinical circumstances. The American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians developed practice guidelines for interventional techniques which are professional practice recommendations for practices for prevention, diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic painful disorders, and in some cases, disability management. ⋯ The results consistently showed decrease in number of visits from 1999 to 2000 and 2001 with 5.5 +/- 0.18, 5.1 +/- 0.17, and 4.3 +/- 0.15 respectively. The average expenditure also decreased from per visit of $872 in 1999 to $891 in 2000, to $810 to 2001. further, the average expenditure per year also decreased as expected due to decrease in frequency of visits, as well as the average expenditure per visit from $4751 +/- $231 in 1999 to $4505 +/- $214 in 2000 and to $3514 +/- $193 in 2001 even without consideration of inflation. Thus, it is concluded that guidelines describing the interventional techniques in the management of chronic pain are effective in reducing the cost and frequency of visits with improvement or at least maintenance of similar outcomes, physician decision making abilities, and patient preferences.
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This study was designed to evaluate psychological status of 150 individuals; 50 without chronic pain and without psychotherapeutic drug therapy, Group I or control group; 50 patients with chronic pain, Group II, chronic pain group with involvement of one region; and 50 chronic pain patients with involvement of two or more regions, Group III. All the participants were tested utilizing Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory -III (MCMI-III). Results were analyzed and compared for various clinical personality patterns including personality traits and personality disorders; severe personality pathology for schizotypal, borderline and paranoid personality pathology; and multiple clinical syndromes including generalized anxiety disorder, somatization disorder, major depression, bipolar manic disorder and dysthymic disorder, etc. ⋯ In the analysis of clinical syndromes, generalized anxiety disorder, somatization disorder, and depressive disorders were seen in a progressively greater proportion of patients in Groups I to III. In conclusion, this evaluation showed that abnormal clinical personality patterns are present in both groups of patients. Psychological abnormalities with generalized anxiety disorder, somatization disorder, and depression are commonly seen in chronic pain patients.