Pain
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Patient-controlled versus staff-controlled analgesia with pethidine after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation.
Patients treated by allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (aBMT) suffer prolonged oropharyngeal mucositis pain. The aim of this study was to prospectively compare patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with an established regimen of staff-controlled analgesia using pethidine (meperidine). Twenty patients undergoing aBMT for haematologic neoplasias or malignant lymphomas randomly received pethidine intravenously either continuously plus supplemental bolus doses on request through the transplant unit staff or by PCA. ⋯ This observation is discussed as a possible Hawthorne effect. Previous studies using morphine demonstrated that PCA diminishes opioid requirement compared to continuous or staff-controlled application in bone marrow recipients. In contrast to these studies, PCA additionally improved pain relief in the present investigation.
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A prospective observational study of cohorts of patients undergoing hip replacement (30), knee replacement (31), and spinal nerve root decompressive surgery (30) were interviewed pre-operatively to identify factors which might correlate with and potentially predict severe post-operative pain and dissatisfaction with analgesic management. The hip patients comprised 33% females and averaged 64 years, while the knee patients were 45% female and older (mean 71 years) and the spinal patients were 43% female and averaged 50 years. The three groups were similar with respect to all other pre-operative variables. ⋯ Significant (P < or = 0.01) multivariate correlates of severe post-operative pain assessed by logistic regression analysis of 11 variables were female gender, high pre-operative pain severity, and younger age. Significant (P < or = 0.01) multivariate correlates of both worse than expected pain experience and low satisfaction were female gender, high pre-operative pain severity, high anxiety about risks and problems, low expected pain severity, age (younger) and high willingness to report pain. These variables may reasonably be tested in further studies as potential predictors of adverse post-operative pain experience.
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The paradoxical combination of sensory loss within the area where pain is felt together with pain evoked by non-noxious stimuli (allodynia) is a characteristic feature of neuropathic pain. This study examined the relationship between (mechanical and thermal) pain thresholds and dynamic and static hyperalgesia in 15 patients with traumatic nerve injury and brush-evoked pain. Sensory tests were carried out both in the allodynic skin area and in the unaffected contralateral mirror image skin. ⋯ There was no relationship between dynamic and static evoked hyperalgesia. These findings suggest a differential processing of repetitive thermal and mechanical stimuli in the central nervous system. Both dynamic and static mechanical hyperalgesia are maintained by activity in heat-sensitive nociceptors, but they are probably mediated by distinct mechanisms.
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Neurogenic dysaesthetic pain in the neck following surgery for tumours in the neck is rare. Rarer still is the combination of pain following surgery with syncope. ⋯ Spinal cord stimulation was used successfully to treat the dysaesthetic pain and syncope in three of the patients while the fourth patient died from the effects of his tumour. Medical practitioners may wish to consider spinal cord stimulation in relation to treating neurogenic dysaesthetic neck pain with syncope.
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Case Reports
The NMDA-receptor antagonist ketamine abolishes neuropathic pain after epidural administration in a clinical case.
A 14-year-old male patient developed severe right limb pain after traumatic sciatic nerve injury. His pain was diagnosed as neuropathic pain (complex regional pain syndrome, type II). He did not respond to any conventional therapy for limb pain including non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, antidepressants, anticonvulsants, continuous epidural administration of local anesthetics and psychotherapy. ⋯ There has been no recurrence of pain for 8 months after discontinuation of epidural ketamine. The symptoms related to dysfunction of the sympathetic nervous system still remained after complete pain relief. We discuss pain mechanisms, pain relief and the use of ketamine in this case.