Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Cognitive coping and appraisal processes in the treatment of chronic headaches.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the active cognitive ingredients of change in psychological treatments for long-term chronic headache complaints. The primary questions this study addressed were: (1) Is a cognitive self-hypnosis training which explicitly attempts to change appraisal and cognitive coping processes more effective in producing these changes than a relaxation procedure, and (2) are changes in pain appraisal and cognitive coping related to changes in pain and adjustment in the short and long term? A total of 144 patients were assigned at random to a cognitive self-hypnosis (CSH) treatment or autogenic training (AT) with a duration of 7 weeks. ⋯ Cognitive therapy was more effective than relaxation training in changing the use of cognitive coping strategies which were the direct targets of treatment. However, treatment effects were only related with changes in the use of coping strategies and appraisal processes to a limited extent and the mediational role of cognitive processes in pain reduction and better adjustment was inconclusive.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
A new method of recording somatosensory evoked potentials by randomized electrical tooth stimulation with 6 levels of intensity.
Dental somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) corresponding to the stimulus intensity levels were recorded at 6 different levels of intensity presented in a randomized order. The relationships between the amplitude of the late SEP component with latency between 150 and 300 msec and each stimulus intensity level were also compared in conditions of randomized intensity and constant intensity. The amplitude of the late component increased significantly with the increased stimulus intensity both in the randomized and constant intensity stimulation. ⋯ The latency of the late positive component significantly increased with the randomized stimulation with a 3-sec ISI. This phenomenon might be attributable to the psychological contamination. SEP recording in the randomized dental stimulation with a 1-sec ISI may have applications in neuropharmacological research or physiological research on pain and evaluation of the effects of analgesics, anesthetics, acupuncture and transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS).
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The influence of low back pain on muscle activity and coordination during gait: a clinical and experimental study.
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a major clinical problem with a substantial socio-economical impact. Today, diagnosis and therapy are insufficient, and knowledge concerning interaction between musculoskeletal pain and motor performance is lacking. Most studies in this field have been performed under static conditions which may not represent CLBP patients' daily-life routines. ⋯ The clinical and experimental findings indicate that musculoskeletal pain modulates motor performance during gait probably via reflex pathways. Initially, these EMG changes may be interpreted as a functional adaptation to muscle pain, but the consequences of chronic altered muscle performance are not known. New possibilities to monitor and investigate altered motor performance may help to develop more rational therapies for CLBP patients.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
NMDA receptor blockade in chronic neuropathic pain: a comparison of ketamine and magnesium chloride.
Ten patients (4 female, 6 male) aged 34-67 years suffering from peripheral neuropathic pain participated in a double-blind placebo-controlled study where ketamine or magnesium chloride were administered by a 10 min bolus infusion (ketamine: 0.84 mumol/kg = 0.2 mg/kg, magnesium: 0.16 mmol/kg) followed by a continuous infusion (ketamine: 1.3 mumol/kg/h = 0.3 mg/kg/h, magnesium: 0.16 mmol/kg/h). Ongoing pain determined by VAS score, area of touch-evoked allodynia, detection and pain thresholds to mechanical and thermal stimuli were measured before and during drug infusion. Ketamine produced a significant reduction of spontaneous pain (57%) and of the area of allodynia (33%). ⋯ Following ketamine there was a significant correlation between the reduction in ongoing pain and reduction in area of touch-evoked allodynia. Detection and pain thresholds to mechanical and thermal stimuli were not significantly changed by the drugs. These findings suggest that both ongoing pain and touch-evoked pain (allodynia) in neuropathic pain are inter-related phenomena, which may be mediated by the same mechanism and involving a N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Amitriptyline effectively relieves neuropathic pain following treatment of breast cancer.
The effectiveness of amitriptyline in relieving neuropathic pain following treatment of breast cancer was studied in 15 patients in a randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study. The dose was escalated from 25 mg to 100 mg per day in 4 weeks. The placebo and amitriptyline phases were separated by a 2-week wash-out period. ⋯ The 'poor responders' reported significantly more adverse effects with amitriptyline and placebo than the good responders. It is concluded that amitriptyline effectively reduced neuropathic pain following treatment of breast cancer. However, the adverse effects of amitriptyline put most of the patients off from using the drug regularly.