Articles: pain-clinics.
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We audited and analysed the adverse effects and safety of postoperative pain management on 2509 consecutive patients under care of the Acute Pain Service at a tertiary referral teaching hospital over a 32-month period. Our standard respiratory monitoring consisted of continuous pulse oximetry, hourly respiratory rate counting, sedation scoring and intermittent arterial blood gas sampling. This protocol was reliable and detected six episodes of bradypnoea, 13 of hypercapnia and 23 of oxygen desaturation occurring in 39 patients (1.8% of all spontaneously breathing patients). ⋯ Postoperative nausea and vomiting decreased analgesic efficacy by discouraging the use of patient-controlled analgesia and was regarded as equally distressing as pain. Other side-effects included: pruritus in 182 patients; dizziness in 333 and lower limb weakness in 73 (21.2% of patients receiving epidural local anaesthetics). It is concluded that a standard monitoring and management protocol, an experienced nursing team and reliable Acute Pain Service coverage is mandatory for the safe use of modern analgesic techniques.
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To provide a brief review of the current state of topical treatment with capsaicin or acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) for therapy of chronic pain syndromes. ⋯ Capsaicin is a white crystalline parent compound of a group of vanillyl fatty acid amines. Because of its highly specific action in neurons it has become an important tool in neuroscience. Because of its effects, it is obvious to try for the therapy of circumscribed neuropathic pain. Capsaicin acts by depleting stores of substance P and other neurotransmitters, resulting in a blockade of a specific group of sensory afferents. The corresponding clinical findings are initial burning and a desensitization of specific C fiber nociceptors after repeated application. The pain relieving potency was observed in various clinical investigations and even in a few controlled, double-blind studies about neuropathic pain syndromes and (osteo)arthritis. In contrast to these findings, a recent study found no significant benefit of capsaicin, probably because this study was the first to use an active placebo. Therefore, and because clinical efficacy and advantages over other therapies have not been demonstrated up to now, capsaicin cannot be classified as standard therapy. It may be a therapeutic option as an alternative or as an adjuvant treatment. Pain reduction was also observed after topical application of ASA/ether mixture in the one and only controlled double-blind study on this issue. Therefore, topical ASA therapy for (post)herpetic neuralgia is mainly based on a few enthusiastic case reports rather than on well founded investigations. Furthermore, the discrimination of local from systemic effects, the toxicological profile of longterm topical treatment, and the mechanism of action has not been evaluated. In conclusion, topical ASA cannot be recommended for routine clinical use at present.
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In a medline search (covering 1966 to Sept. 1996) 32 clinical studies were identified, in which the efficacy of paracetamol or matamizol per se, or in comparison to other analgesics, in various chronic pain states, such as migraine, dysmenorrhoea, arthritis and osteoarthritis pain and cancer pain had been examined. In patients with migraine (4 studies) several other analgesics (ibuprofen, mefenamic acid, flupirtin) were slightly more effective than paracetamol, however, the efficacy of paracetamol itself had not been assessed. In patients with chronic tension headache (1 study) paracetamol was superior to placebo, but less effective than naproxen. ⋯ Paracetamol and/or metamizol have been included in 14 studies on cancer pain, most of these studies attempting to validate the WHO analgesic ladder for cancer pain treatment. However, except for one study, in which metamizol was comparable in efficacy to morphine, all other publications do not provide detailed information on the efficacy of individual analgesics. Therefore it is not possible at present, to assess the possible merits of paracetamol or metamizol in the treatment of cancer pain from published studies.
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Pain perception is a complex psychosomatic phenomenon and is influenced by different psychological variables. Apart from their pain perception, chronic pain patients also suffer from different bodily complaints. The clinical significance of this finding is not yet clear. Bodily complaints in chronic pain patients may represent (a) a bodily expression of depressive symptoms, (b) a sign of chronicity, and (c) the expression of a heightened bodily awareness in the sense of hypochondriasis. ⋯ From a cognitive-behavioral perspective the results support the hypothesis that psychological disturbance in chronic pain is a cause of long-standing pain perception and the result of the chronification process.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jul 1997
Comparative StudyManagement of patient-controlled analgesia: a comparison of primary surgeons and a dedicated pain service.
Although Patient-Controlled Analgesia (PCA) is routinely available in most hospitals in the United States, there appears to be little standardization regarding who provides this valuable service to postoperative patients. This study evaluates the differences in PCA management practices and patient outcomes between primary service (PS) physicians and acute pain service (APS) physicians. Over a 3-mo period, 40 patients prescribed PCA by PS physicians were prospectively studied without the knowledge of the physicians or nurses involved in PCA management. ⋯ Although pain scores were not different between groups, APS patients had fewer side effects, were more likely to receive a loading dose, had their PCA settings adjusted more often (P < 0.05), and used more opioid. PS patients were more likely to receive intramuscular medications after PCA discontinuation (P < 0.05). This study demonstrates potentially important PCA management differences between APS and PS physicians.