Pain
-
Single-dose clinical trial methods for evaluating analgesics have been used successfully for over 50 years. The aims of this review were to examine which pain measurement scales have been used in high quality acute pain trials, to investigate other common measurements or characteristics, to confirm that different scales used by standard methods give the same estimate of analgesic effect, to investigate remedication methodologies and the potential of 'time to remedication' as a standard outcome. Published reports of randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled trials, investigating at least 20 adult patients (10 patients per treatment arm) experiencing moderate or severe pain using at least one standard pain intensity or pain relief scale were sought. ⋯ Possible improvements include reporting the number of patients with certain levels of pain relief, or the actual number (percentage) of patients with a certain level of pain relief at a certain time, or more useful information on remedication from trials of at least 12 h duration. Most useful would be all three. Further exploration would only be possible from analysis at the individual patient level.
-
Recurrent pain in childhood are common and frequently impact children's everyday functioning. However, there are currently limited tools available to measure the impact of recurrent pain on children's daily activities, in particular, that can be used to identify appropriate targets for intervention and measure response to such interventions. The purpose of this study was to develop and validate a new measure, the Child Activity Limitations Interview (CALI), to improve the assessment of functional impairment due to recurrent pain in school-age children and adolescents, and to compare this measure to the Functional Disability Inventory. ⋯ One-month test-retest reliability (r = 0.33, child report) and cross-informant reliability (r = 0.43) were moderate. Results demonstrate support for face, construct, and concurrent validity as well as responsiveness to pain symptom fluctuation. Findings demonstrate that the CALI is a promising measure for assessing and monitoring subjective report of functional impairment in school-age children and adolescents with recurrent and chronic pain.
-
Comparative Study Historical Article
Office visits and analgesic prescriptions for musculoskeletal pain in US: 1980 vs. 2000.
The treatment of pain has received increasing attention over the past decade promoted by national guidelines, the 'pain as the 5th vital sign' campaign and direct-to-consumer advertising. We examined national trends in office visits and analgesic treatment for musculoskeletal pain in the office setting, comparing data from 1980 and 2000. We analysed the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS)--a nationally representative survey of visits to office-based physicians--using data from 1980-81 (n=89,000 visits) and 1999-2000 (n=45,000 visits). ⋯ This corresponds to 5.9 million visits where potent opioids were prescribed in 2000--an increase of 4.6 million visits from 1980 (assuming the total number of outpatient visits was constant at the 2000 level). In spite of the increased attention to pain treatment, there has not been an increase in office visits for musculoskeletal pain complaints. The threshold for prescribing NSAIDS and opioids, however, has dropped.
-
Clinical Trial
Intrathecal opioid treatment for chronic non-malignant pain: a 3-year prospective study.
Intrathecal (IT) opioid therapy is a treatment alternative for patients with severe chronic non-malignant pain. Several uncontrolled retrospective and prospective outcome studies have suggested a benefit in chronic non-malignant pain patients, but uncertainties about patient selection in these studies weaken the results. This study evaluated long-term outcome of IT opioid therapy in chronic non-malignant pain prospectively, and included two comparative groups to improve understanding of selection criteria and relative severity of intrathecal pump recipients (PRs). ⋯ These same parameters improved among new referrals (less severe patients receiving conservative pain management) while non-recipients significantly worsened. Although PRs improved, they were still worse off at 36 months than new referrals were at baseline. The study showed that when patients with extremely severe pain problems are selected as pump candidates, they will likely improve with the therapy, but their overall severity of pain and symptoms still remains high.
-
Comparative Study
Mice lacking fatty acid amide hydrolase exhibit a cannabinoid receptor-mediated phenotypic hypoalgesia.
Although the N-arachidonoyl ethanolamine (anandamide) binds to cannabinoid receptors and has been implicated in the suppression of pain, its rapid catabolism in vivo by fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) has presented a challenge in investigating the physiological functions of this endogenous cannabinoid. In order to test whether anandamide and other non-cannabinoid fatty amides modulate nociception, we compared FAAH (+/+) and (-/-) mice in the tail immersion, hot plate, and formalin tests, as well as for thermal hyperalgesia in the carrageenan and the chronic constriction injury (CCI) models. FAAH (-/-) mice exhibited a CB1 receptor-mediated phenotypic hypoalgesia in thermal nociceptive tests. ⋯ In contrast, no genotype differences in pain behavior were evident following CCI, which was instead found to obliterate the phenotypic hypoalgesia displayed by FAAH (-/-) mice in the tail immersion and hot plate tests, suggesting that nerve injury may promote adaptive changes in these animals. Collectively, these findings demonstrate a cannabinoid receptor-mediated analgesic phenotype in FAAH (-/-) mice. In more general terms, these findings suggest that selective inhibitors of FAAH might represent a viable pharmacological approach for the clinical treatment of pain disorders.