Pain
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To enhance patient-centred care of people with hip pain, we need a comprehensive understanding of peoples' beliefs about their hip pain. This systematic review explored the beliefs and expectations of middle-aged and older adults about chronic hip pain and its care across different healthcare settings and contexts. This review was a synthesis of qualitative studies using a framework synthesis approach. ⋯ People coped with their hip pain by avoiding or modifying activity. People were not educated about treatments or used treatments that failed to improve their hip pain. People believed that surgery for their hip was inevitable.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Adenosine causes short-lasting vasodilation and headache, but not migraine attacks in migraine patients: A randomized clinical trial.
Migraine is a common disabling disease with a complex pathophysiology. Headache is a frequent side effect after intravenous adenosine administration, although adenosine receptor antagonist, caffeine, relieves migraine headache. These observations suggest a possible involvement of adenosine signaling in headache and migraine pathophysiology. ⋯ Adenosine increased heart rate ( P < 0.001), facial skin blood flow ( P < 0.05), and STA diameter (AUC T0-20min , P = 0.01) and decreased V MCA (AUC T0-20min , P < 0.001) compared with placebo. Adenosine induced headache accompanied by a short-lasting (<30 minutes) dilation of intracerebral and extracerebral arteries. The nonsignificant migraine induction might be because of the presence of several adenosine receptors with counteracting signaling, highlighting the need of more selective modulators to dissect the implication of adenosine in migraine.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Randomized controlled trial of intrathecal oxytocin on speed of recovery after hip arthroplasty.
Recovery from surgery is quicker in the postpartum period, and this may reflect oxytocin action in the spinal cord. We hypothesized that intrathecal injection of oxytocin would speed recovery from pain and disability after major surgery. Ninety-eight individuals undergoing elective total hip arthroplasty were randomized to receive either intrathecal oxytocin (100 μg) or saline. ⋯ In planned secondary analyses, postoperative opioid use ended earlier in the oxytocin group and oxytocin-treated patients walked nearly 1000 more steps daily at 8 weeks ( P < 0.001) and exhibited a clinically meaningful reduction in disability for the first 21 postoperative days ( P = 0.007) compared with saline placebo. Intrathecal oxytocin before hip replacement surgery does not speed recovery from worst daily pain. Secondary analyses suggest that further study of intrathecal oxytocin to speed functional recovery without worsening pain after surgery is warranted.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Referred sensation location can be altered by a strong heterotopic nociceptive stimulus: Implications for clinical pain conditions.
Referred sensations (RS) are a common clinical phenomenon in patients with musculoskeletal pain; however, the underlying mechanisms of RS and implications for diagnosis and management are poorly understood. The location of referral seems to have a preferred site, but studies have suggested it can be redirected to a site of previous injury and pain. However, it is not known if the same phenomenon can occur for a much shorter-lasting painful stimulus in the trigeminal system. ⋯ However, the RS location was displaced on average 1.2 cm between the baseline and postinfusion assessments for the hypertonic saline infusion, which was significantly increased when compared with the isotonic saline infusion which was on average 0.4 cm. These novel findings indicate the potential to modify the location of RS in the trigeminal system following a relatively brief noxious input. Clinicians need to be aware of the possible rerouting of RS in patients with complex orofacial pain.
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The bladder wall is innervated by a complex network of afferent nerves that detect bladder stretch during filling. Sensory signals, generated in response to distension, are relayed to the spinal cord and brain to evoke physiological and painful sensations and regulate urine storage and voiding. Hyperexcitability of these sensory pathways is a key component in the development of chronic bladder hypersensitivity disorders including interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome and overactive bladder syndrome. ⋯ Further evaluation revealed that Ca V 3.2 blockers significantly inhibited both low- and high-threshold afferents, decreasing peak responses to distension, and delayed activation thresholds, thereby attenuating bladder afferent responses to both physiological and noxious distension. Nocifensive visceromotor responses to noxious bladder distension in vivo were also significantly reduced by inhibition of Ca V 3 with TTA-A2. Together, these data provide evidence of a major role for Ca V 3.2 in regulating bladder afferent responses to bladder distension and nociceptive signalling to the spinal cord.