The Clinical journal of pain
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One hundred fifty randomly selected hospitalized children between the ages of 4-14 were interviewed to assess their pain experience in the hospital. Follow-up information was obtained through parent interviews 3 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months later. On enrollment, more than 87% of children reported having had pain within 24 h and, of those, 19% reported their usual pain intensity as in the severe range. ⋯ In spite of these reports of significant pain by a substantial number of children during hospitalization, at the 3-week follow-up check, by parent report, 68% were pain free. The parents of those with pain were contacted at 3 and 6 months postenrollment, and 96% of children were no longer experiencing pain. Five children reported pain at all contact points; three of these were suffering chronic diseases and the other two had suffered major trauma from motor-vehicle accidents.
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Spinal cord injury (SCI) can cause paralysis; sensory impairment; autonomic nervous system dysfunction; and bowel, bladder, and sexual dysfunction. These impairments may lead to immobility, physical dependence, and alterations in lifestyle and self-esteem. The addition of chronic, intractable pain to these impairments can be truly devastating. ⋯ Thus, it may become impossible for the individual to escape his or her pain even temporarily. The various medical, physical, and surgical treatments considered to be efficacious in treating this pain are reviewed. However, although chronic pain in SCI may be managed by these therapies, a permanent cure may not result.
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Comment Letter Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The needle and the brain: psychophysiological factors involved in nerve blocking for chronic pain. In response to article by Drs. Brena, Chapman, and Sanders.
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With the medical progress that has given spinal cord injured individuals greater longevity and better overall health, chronic pain has emerged as a major challenge in treating this population. Over the past 40 years, estimates of prevalence of severe/disabling chronic pain in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients have ranged from 18% to 63%. Beyond this finding, the extant literature is extremely limited. ⋯ A major purpose of the present article is to expand the scope of inquiry to include these factors and to emphasize the importance of employing a biopsychosocial model. Evidence is reviewed which suggests that chronic pain is associated with psychosocial impairment in this population. It is concluded that rather than being a minor problem in comparison to the other limitations imposed by SCI, chronic pain represents a significant additional challenge to the SCI patient that may be best addressed by a multidisciplinary approach.
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Cognitive theories of appraisal argue for the importance of beliefs as determinants of adjustment to stress. The current investigation sought to examine the relation between beliefs about chronic pain and adjustment in a group of chronic pain patients. Patients' belief in themselves as disabled was found to be inversely related to activity level for patients reporting low and medium levels of pain severity. ⋯ Finally, an expressed belief in the appropriateness of solicitous responses from family members was negatively related to psychological functioning for patients reporting relatively low levels of pain. Although these findings support the broad-based hypothesis that the illness-relevant beliefs of chronic pain patients are associated with their multidimensional pain adjustment, they emphasize the importance of beliefs concerning whether or not one is disabled by pain. The findings also highlight the fact that the belief/functioning relation is not always direct and can be moderated by perceived pain severity.