The Clinical journal of pain
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Headache is the most common complaint encountered in clinical practice. Approximately 45 million people in the United States experience chronic headaches. The management of migraine headache involves both pharmacologic and nondrug therapy. ⋯ Prophylactic therapy is focused on reducing the frequency and severity of the attacks. beta-Adrenergic blocking agents, such as propranolol, remain the primary agents for many migraine patients, although other drugs, such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), including ketoprofen, or calcium-channel blocking agents, such as verapamil, may be beneficial for many patients. For cluster headache and its variants, methysergide and corticosteroids are usually the drugs of choice. Patients with chronic cluster headache may achieve good results from long-term treatment with other therapies, including lithium carbonate, verapamil, and ketoprofen.
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This article reviews the literature and describes clinical methods of providing analgesia for acute pain using epidural and intrathecal (spinal) opiates. The mechanism of action of these drugs, their basic pharmacology and spinal pharmacodynamics, and useful drugs and dosages are presented. The side effects of these drugs when administered by injection and possible ways to diminish their incidence and severity are discussed. A clinical protocol for the dosage and selection of these drugs is included.
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Within acute pain management, as within any rapidly expanding field of therapeutic endeavor, novel treatment modalities may on occasion overreach their scientific foundations. In general, a cautionary theme is expressed regarding the utilization of various therapies, lest their overzealous clinical implementation jeopardizes the advancement of this highly promising field. ⋯ The subject of dosing for acute pain conditions with opiates via the epidural route versus intravenous opioid administration is discussed from the perspectives of practicality and risk/benefit assignments. The advisability and means of using demand-mode techniques in order to resolve the central issue of inherent benefits of opioid administration via one route or another is also presented.
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Physicians have in their armamentaria of drugs and techniques sufficient methods of relieving postoperative pain to maintain an analgesic state in postsurgical patients. The extent of the problem, and the options available, are discussed and described.