Articles: pain-clinics.
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Improving the quality of postoperative pain relief.
A review of the literature shows a constant need to improve the quality of postoperative pain management. The objective of this study was to decrease the intensity and variation of postoperative pain by developing a nurse-based pain service on the ward. An acute pain nurse was appointed and an educational programme with detailed algorithms was started. ⋯ On an average, inadequate pain relief (retrospective average pain > 3/10) on the first postoperative day was more frequent on the ward before than after the reform (47 vs. 21%; 95% CI for differences 15-35%; p<0.001 for pain scores). The incidence of side-effects was similar in both groups (p> 0.05). The intensity and variation of postoperative pain on the ward decreased by developing a nurse-based pain service with an acute pain nurse, an educational programme and regular pain intensity measurements.
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Neuropathic pain is a challenge for clinicians because it is resistant to commonly prescribed analgesics, such as opioids and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs. Fortunately, adjuvant analgesics, drugs not typically thought of as pain relievers, may be effective. It is helpful to classify adjuvant analgesics used to treat neuropathic pain into two broad categories: (1) membrane stabilizing agents, which inhibit ectopic discharges on damaged neural membranes, and (2) drugs that enhance dorsal horn inhibition, which may augment biogenic amine or GABAergic mechanisms in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. ⋯ Although polypharmacy is the result, this approach may improve therapy and minimize side effects. From a safety standpoint, medications generally should be started at low doses and titrated to effect. Although labor-intensive, this strategy can improve compliance and optimize patient care.
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Subjective well-being is an essential ingredient in the quality of life concept. The Marburg questionnaire, a seven item scale for the assessment of the trait dimension of well-being, claims to possess good psychometric properties. This is investigated in two studies with chronic pain patients. ⋯ The good psychometric quality of the questionnaire along with its brevity allows its application as part of a quality of life assessment.
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To what degree can facial expression scales help children differentiate between the sensory and emotional aspects of the pain experience? This study examined the relationship between children's ratings on the Faces Pain Scale (an intensity measure), the Facial Affective Scale (an affective measure), and a paired mechanical visual analogue (MVAS) method for measuring the intensity and unpleasantness of pain. It was predicted that ratings on the Faces Pain Scale should correlate best with the MVAS measure of pain intensity rather than unpleasantness. Likewise, ratings on the Facial Affective Scale should correlate best with the MVAS measure of pain unpleasantness (assumed to reflect an emotional dimension) rather than intensity. ⋯ No systematic age effects were observed. In conclusion, the Faces Pain Scale and the Facial Affective Scale may partly measure different aspects of the pain experience in children, although it remains to be determined to what degree the obtained differences are clinically meaningful. Copyright 1999 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
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A 50-year-old woman with noninsulin-dependent diabetes and cirrhosis of the liver from hepatitis-B infection presented with right-sided neck and severe shoulder pain. Minimal tenderness and swelling of the right sternoclavicular joint were noted. After 8 days, extensive studies, and several attempts at therapy to relieve the shoulder pain, the right sternoclavicular joint had become more swollen, extremely tender, warm, and erythematous. ⋯ The patient had an uneventful recovery after treatment with open drainage and parenteral antibiotics. Although this anaerobic organism is known to cause infection at other joint sites, this seems to be the first report of infection of the sternoclavicular joint and proximal clavicle by Prevotella melaninogenicus. This case illustrates the following: 1) neck and shoulder pain may be the presenting symptoms of occult septic arthritis of the sternoclavicular joint, 2) clinical signs of infection, such as fever and leukocytosis, may be absent in the setting of anaerobic joint infections, 3) an arthrotomy should be performed as soon as an infection of the sternoclavicular joint is suspected, 4) anaerobic as well as aerobic cultures should be taken when evaluating septic arthritis 5) 2 or more weeks may be required for identification of an anaerobic organism, such as Prevotella melaninogenicus.