Pain
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Procedural anxiety and pain negatively affect surgical outcomes and the patient experience during awake, invasive procedures (AIPs). This systematic review aims to evaluate the effect of using virtual reality (VR) to enhance the intraprocedural patient experience during AIPs. PRISMA, Cochrane, and SWiM Reporting Items guidelines were followed. ⋯ No significant differences in patient experience were identified between the "incision" and "endoscopic" subgroups. This review demonstrates that VR can feasibly be used to enhance the patient experience during AIPs by attenuating subjective perceptions of procedural anxiety and pain. However, further RCTs are required to elucidate the effect of VR on more objective measures of the patient experience.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
A randomized controlled trial of graded exposure treatment (GET living) for adolescents with chronic pain.
Graded exposure treatment (GET) is a theory-driven pain treatment that aims to improve functioning by exposing patients to activities previously feared and avoided. Combining key elements of GET with acceptance-based exposure, GET Living (GL) was developed for adolescents with chronic pain (GL). Based on robust treatment effects observed in our single-case experimental design pilot trial of GL (NCT01974791), we conducted a 2-arm randomized clinical trial comparing GL with multidisciplinary pain management (MPM) comprised of cognitive behavioral therapy and physical therapy for pain management (NCT03699007). ⋯ Patients reported both GL and MPM (in person and video) as credible and were highly satisfied with the treatment experience. Next steps will involve examining the single-case experimental design data embedded in this trial to facilitate an understanding of individual differences in treatment responses (eg, when effects occurred, what processes changed during treatment within the treatment arm). The current findings support GET Living and MPM for youth with chronic pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Vaso-occlusive crisis pain intensity, frequency, and duration: which best correlates with health-related quality of life in adolescents and adults with sickle cell disease?
In a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from a randomized clinical trial, we studied 198 adolescents and adults aged 15+ with sickle cell disease. Interest was in assessing the relative strengths of the relationship of vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) pain domains of intensity, frequency, and duration, with health-related quality of life (HRQOL). Variation in psychosocial, physical function, and pain expression domains of HRQOL was partially explained by frequency, intensity, and duration of VOC pain, separately and together, over and above differences in age, sex, genotype, and organ system damage. ⋯ Vaso-occlusive crisis pain frequency explained the most variation, when simultaneously considering VOC intensity and duration, except for stiffness , where duration was most predictive. Yet VOC pain intensity, and even VOC duration, also contributed to variability in HRQOL. We recommend that for most purposes, because all 3 VOC pain domains contribute to variability in HRQOL, all 3 domains should be assessed and interventions should be targeted to improve all 3 domains to maximize HRQOL outcomes (Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02197845 ).
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Information-processing biases such as attentional, interpretation, and memory biases are believed to play a role in exacerbating and maintaining chronic pain (CP). Evidence suggests that individuals with CP show attentional bias toward pain-related information. However, the selective attentional processes that underpin this bias are not always well outlined in the literature. ⋯ However, variation across studies did not allow for a decisive conclusion about the role of stimulus, task type, or related attentional processes. In addition, a table of CP attention-related models was produced and tested for reliability. Finally, other results and recommendations are discussed.
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This study aimed to characterize the sensory responses observed when electrically stimulating the white matter surrounding the posterior insula and medial operculum (PIMO). We reviewed patients operated on under awake conditions for a glioma located in the temporoparietal junction. Patients' perceptions were retrieved from operative reports. ⋯ Heat sites were located in the thalamo-OP1 tract. In the 227 awake surgeries performed for a tumor located outside of the PIMO region, no patients ever reported pain or heat sensations when stimulating the white matter. Thus, we propose that the thalamo-PIMO connections constitute the main cortical inputs for nociception and thermoception and emphasize that preserving these fibers is of utmost importance to prevent the postoperative onset of a debilitating insulo-opercular pain syndrome.