Articles: pain-management.
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The aim of this comprehensive review was to provide an overview of pain in Parkinson's disease (PD) by identifying different clinical features and potential mechanisms, and presenting some data on the evaluation and management of pain in PD. PD is a multifocal degenerative and progressive disease, which could affect the pain process at multiple levels. ⋯ Understanding the underlying mechanisms will help in guiding of treatment choices. Providing scientific support useful for clinicians and health professionals involved in management of PD, the aim of this review was to bringing practical suggestions and clinical perspectives on the development of a multimodal approach guided by a multidisciplinary clinical intervention through a combination of pharmacological and rehabilitative approaches, to manage pain to improve the quality of life on individuals with PD.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
The selfBACK artificial intelligence-based smartphone app can improve low back pain outcome even in patients with high levels of depression or stress.
selfBACK provides individually tailored self-management support for low back pain (LBP) via an artificial intelligence-based smartphone app. We explore whether those with depressive/stress symptoms can benefit from this technology. ⋯ We have demonstrated that an app supporting the self-management of LBP is helpful, even in those with higher levels of baseline depression and stress symptoms. selfBACK offers an opportunity to support people with LBP and provides clinicians with an additional tool for their patients, even those with depression or high levels of stress. This highlights the potential for digital health interventions for chronic pain.
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Review
A Systematic Review of Barriers and Facilitators of Pain Management in Persons with Dementia.
Approximately 50% of persons living with dementia experience pain, yet it is frequently undetected and inadequately managed resulting in adverse consequences. This review aims to synthesize evidence on the barriers and facilitators of pain management in persons living with dementia. PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Web of Science datasets were used for article searching. ⋯ The results indicate that there is a need for multi-component interventions that involves multidisciplinary teams to improve pain management in persons living with dementia at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, environmental, and policy levels. PERSPECTIVE: This review systematically synthesized barriers and facilitators of providing pain management in persons living with dementia. Results were presented in intrapersonal, interpersonal, environmental, and policy categories and suggests that multicomponent interventions involving multidisciplinary teams are needed to systematically improve pain management in persons living with dementia.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · May 2023
Sarcopenia is associated with an increase in long-term use of analgesics after elective surgery under general anesthesia.
To elucidate the association of presurgical sarcopenia and long-term non-opioid analgesic and opioid use after elective surgery under general anesthesia. ⋯ The aim of this study was to compare the long-term use of non-opioid analgesics and opioids after elective surgery under general anesthesia between patients with and without sarcopenia. Results suggest that patients with sarcopenia are more likely to have increased use of non-opioid analgesics and opioids after surgery. Further research is needed to determine if sarcopenia can be modified prior to surgery and if this impacts the need for long-term pain management with these medications.
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Minerva anestesiologica · May 2023
Acute and chronic pain management in sport medicine: an expert opinion looking at an alternative mechanism-based approach to the pharmacological treatment.
In the last decades there has been a huge increase in people who practice sports requesting an increase of the performance. Consequently, also incidence of acute and chronic pain is highly increased in this population of "healthy" people. Pain represents not only a signal of a lesion occurred during the sportive activity, but also (and almost) an unbalance of posture or an overuse of specific articulations or muscles, that has to be resolved not only with a correct physiotherapeutic approach, but also with a careful diagnosis of the complex mechanisms that sustain the pain. ⋯ Hence, the pain therapist assumes a pivotal role in the management of pain in people who practice sports, for his skills in pain diagnosis, and for the possibility to introduce new mechanism-based therapies. In the last decade, these new therapies, such as regenerative medicine and peripheral neuromodulation, have demonstrated their effectiveness not only to reduce pain, but also to facilitate the healing process and the faster return to the sportive activity. In this expert opinion we summarize the most recent data to support this approach, focalizing not only on how to treat specific pain syndromes but also on how pain therapist could drive, through a careful diagnosis of the pain mechanism, to a new simultaneous mechanism-based disease modifying approach in people with pain practicing sport.