The Clinical journal of pain
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Review
Headache continuum: concept and supporting evidence from recent study of chronic daily headache.
A headache continuum on the basis of the dynamic nature of headache is presented, with episodic headaches developing into daily headaches and vice versa. The concept is supported by evidence from recent study of (gradual-onset) chronic daily headache.
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Do physical findings that are used to indicate location and extent of tissue damage and a measure of the severity of initial pain predict subsequent reports of pain and of disability? ⋯ The studies provide moderate evidence (level 2) that reports of the intensity of pain in acute musculoskeletal injury predict subsequent reports of pain. There is limited evidence (level 3) that the location and extent of injury predict reports of pain and poor functional activity outcomes. There is moderate evidence (level 2) that physical symptoms and signs cannot be considered individual predictors of chronic pain disability as measured by participation outcomes. Instead, in the transition from subacute to chronic pain disability, functional disability and psychological distress play a more important role than pain intensity.
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Can either a history of previous similar injury, including recurrence of injury, or an individual's symptoms, including time off work, predict chronic pain and/or chronic pain disability? ⋯ The studies provide moderate evidence (level 2) that a history of previous similar pain predicts subsequent reports of pain and limited evidence (level 3) that a history of similar pain predicts poorer outcomes after recurrent injury. The studies also provide moderate evidence (level 2) that longer duration of pain predicts the occurrence of subsequent reports of pain and limited evidence (level 3) that longer time off work before treatment predicts poorer activity and poorer participation outcomes after recurrent injury.
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The purpose of this review was to determine how effective surgery and injection therapy are in the management of chronic pain. ⋯ Standard discectomy compared with conservative treatment for proven disc herniation (< or = 1 year) and local triamcinolone injection for lateral epicondylitis (< or = 12 weeks) are both effective for pain relief (level 2). There was limited evidence of effectiveness (level 3) of intraoperative steroid at discectomy, epidural steroid injection for sciatica with low back pain, caudal steroid injection for low back pain, local glycosaminoglycan polyphosphate injection for lateral epicondylitis, intraarticular steroid injection for shoulder arthritis, subacromial steroid injections for rotator cuff tendinitis, nonspecific injections for painful shoulder, systemic growth hormone for fibromyalgia, and intravenous adenosine for fibromyalgia. There was limited evidence (level 3) that there is no additional benefit of adding steroid to local anesthetic in caudal epidural injections. There is limited evidence (level 3) that intravenous adenosine is ineffective for fibromyalgia. The remaining evidence was inadequate (level 4a) or contradictory (level 4b).
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The mechanisms underlying chronic pain after whiplash injury are usually unclear. Injuries may cause sensitization of spinal cord neurons in animals (central hypersensitivity), which results in increased responsiveness to peripheral stimuli. In humans, the responsiveness of the central nervous system to peripheral stimulation may be explored by applying sensory tests to healthy tissues. The hypotheses of this study were: (1) chronic whiplash pain is associated with central hypersensitivity; (2) central hypersensitivity is maintained by nociception arising from the painful or tender muscles in the neck. ⋯ The authors found a hypersensitivity to peripheral stimulation in whiplash patients. Hypersensitivity was observed after cutaneous and muscular stimulation, at both neck and lower limb. Because hypersensitivity was observed in healthy tissues, it resulted from alterations in the central processing of sensory stimuli (central hypersensitivity). Central hypersensitivity was not dependent on a nociceptive input arising from the painful and tender muscles.