The Clinical journal of pain
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Review Case Reports
Chemical sympathectomy for neuropathic pain: does it work? Case report and systematic literature review.
To determine if chemical sympathectomy successfully reduces limb neuropathic pain. ⋯ Based on the case reported and systematic literature review, chemical sympathectomy seems to have at best a temporary effect, limited to cutaneous allodynia. Despite the popularity of chemical sympatholysis, only few patients and poorly defined outcomes are reported in the literature, substantiating the need for well-designed studies on the effectiveness of the procedure.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Acupuncture for chronic low back pain: a randomized placebo-controlled study with long-term follow-up.
The authors sought to determine whether a series of needle acupuncture treatments produced long-term relief of chronic low back pain. ⋯ The authors found a long-term pain-relieving effect of needle acupuncture compared with true placebo in some patients with chronic nociceptive low back pain.
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The literature contains many different viewpoints on the impact of compensation on recovery from chronic pain. ⋯ Filing a compensation claim for costs, retaining a lawyer, or higher pain intensities were limited predictors of longer claims (level 3). As the ratio of compensation to preinjury wage increases, there is moderate evidence (level 2) that the duration of the claim increases and that disability is more likely. Compensation status, particularly combined with higher pain intensities, is associated with poorer prognosis after rehabilitation treatment programs (level 3).
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Disability is a multifactorial phenomenon. Social scientists suggest that nonclinical factors, including age, education, and job status, correlate with disability. ⋯ Lack of modified work and lack of work autonomy predicted chronic pain disability (level 2). There was limited evidence (level 3) that lack of job satisfaction, perception of difficult job conditions and demands, heavy physical demands of the job, private rather than public employment, and lower socioeconomic group predict chronic pain disability. The number of years employed varied as a predictor in different studies (level 4b).
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Multicenter Study
Psychometric properties of a Spanish version of the McGill Pain Questionnaire in several Spanish-speaking countries.
Versions of the McGill Pain Questionnaire are available in a several languages and are used in clinical studies and sociocultural or ethnic comparisons of pain issues. However, there is a lack of studies that compare the validity and reliability of the instrument in the countries where it is used. The current study investigates the psychometric properties of a Spanish version of the McGill Pain Questionnaire in five Spanish-speaking countries. ⋯ The psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the McGill Pain Questionnaire assessed in different Latin-American countries suggest that the questionnaire may be used to evaluate Spanish-speaking patients. The validity of this test should be extended with reliability studies to further establish its usefulness in the evaluation of pain.