Pain
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The clinical effects of motor cortex stimulation (MCS) for neuropathic pain (NP) is thought to be mediated primarily by the secretion of endogenous opioids in humans and in animal models. Because opioid receptor density is itself decreased in patients with NP, we investigated whether the magnitude and distribution of the remaining opioid receptors in patients with NP could be biological predictors of the pain-relieving effects of MCS. Using (11)C-diprenorphine positron emission tomography scans, opioid receptor availability was assessed in 15 patients suffering refractory NP, who subsequently received chronically implanted MCS. ⋯ The levels of preoperative opioid-binding in the insula, thalamus, periaqueductal gray, anterior cingulate, and orbitofrontal cortex were significantly and positively correlated with postoperative pain relief at 7mo. Patients with receptor density values below the lower limits in age-matched controls in the thalamus, periaqueductal gray and contralateral insula were the least likely to benefit from MCS. Opioid-receptor availability as shown in preoperative positron emission tomography scans appears to be related to the efficacy of MCS in NP and may help clinicians to select the candidates most likely to benefit from this procedure.
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The expression of pain is altered in people with dementia (PWD), increasing the risk of undertreatment in that population. The objective of this study was to determine whether dementia and the absence of pain assessment in the patients' medical chart reduced the probability of analgesic use in a large sample of nursing home (NH) residents. This is a cross-sectional study using data from 6275 residents (mean age 86 ± 8.2 years; 73.7% women) from 175 NHs located in France. ⋯ Results remained fairly unchanged after performing several sensitivity analyses. Our results suggest that improvements are needed in pain management in NHs, particularly for PWD. Implementing systematic evaluations of pain in NHs' routine would contribute to a better management of pain, which can lead to important benefits for residents.
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Fibromyalgia is a common, disabling syndrome that includes chronic widespread pain plus diverse additional symptoms. No specific objective abnormalities have been identified, which precludes definitive testing, disease-modifying treatments, and identification of causes. In contrast, small-fiber polyneuropathy (SFPN), despite causing similar symptoms, is definitionally a disease caused by the dysfunction and degeneration of peripheral small-fiber neurons. ⋯ Blood tests from subjects with fibromyalgia and SFPN-diagnostic skin biopsies provided insights into causes. All glucose tolerance tests were normal, but 8 subjects had dysimmune markers, 2 had hepatitis C serologies, and 1 family had apparent genetic causality. These findings suggest that some patients with chronic pain labeled as fibromyalgia have unrecognized SFPN, a distinct disease that can be tested for objectively and sometimes treated definitively.
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The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and the mediodorsal thalamus (MD) form interconnected neural circuits that are important for spatial cognition and memory, but it is not known whether the functional connectivity between these areas is affected by the onset of an animal model of inflammatory pain. To address this issue, we implanted 2 multichannel arrays of electrodes in the mPFC and MD of adult rats and recorded local field potential activity during a food-reinforced spatial working memory task. Recordings were performed for 3weeks, before and after the establishment of the pain model. ⋯ In addition, spectral analysis revealed significant oscillations of power across frequency bands, namely with a strong theta component that oscillated after the onset of the painful condition. Finally, our data revealed that chronic pain induces an increase in theta/gamma phase coherence and a higher level of mPFC-MD coherence, which is partially conserved across frequency bands. The present results demonstrate that functional disturbances in mPFC-MD connectivity are a relevant cause of deficits in pain-related working memory.