The Clinical journal of pain
-
We studied 31 patients with acute herpes zoster (AHZ) less than 28 days' duration. Clinical characteristics (pain, allodynia, course of disease) and somatosensory perception thresholds (thermal discrimination, hot pain, and vibration) of the affected dermatome and the contralateral homologous area were assessed. Touch-evoked allodynia was found in 17 (55%) and dysesthesia in a further 5 (16%). ⋯ Thermal threshold abnormalities were significantly associated with the prevalence of postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) at 3 months. The effect of nerve blockade was less favorable on allodynia than spontaneous pain. The results of possible pathophysiological mechanisms are discussed.
-
Despite advances in the understanding of pain mechanisms and innovative strategies to assess pain patients, there continues to be a substantial proportion of patients who do not appear to benefit from treatment interventions available. One possible explanation for these results is the tendency to treat chronic pain patients as a homogeneous group with generic treatments--adherence to "patient and treatment uniformity myths." Following from the traditional medical model, several attempts have been made to identify specific subgroups of patients exclusively on the basis of physical factors. ⋯ Alternative strategies to classify subgroups of pain patients based on combinations of physical, psychosocial, and behavioral measures (i.e., multiaxial strategies) are presented. The efforts to classify homogeneous subgroups of chronic pain patients are reviewed, and the potential utility of customizing therapeutic interventions to patient characteristics is discussed.
-
Those in professions treating pain must prepare to justify the cost-effectiveness of the treatments they supply. Attempts have been made to define cost-effectiveness. Is it the lowest possible cost? The return of the patient to work and other daily activities? Pain clinics must develop good working relationships with business providers; establish credibility; plan, communicate, evaluate results scientifically; and educate the public.
-
This study examined profiles of self-reported depressive symptoms in chronic pain patients (n = 51), family practice outpatients (n = 52), and controls (n = 53) who were receiving neither psychological nor medical treatment and were pain free. Subjects in the three groups were matched for age and sex. ⋯ Chronic pain and family practice groups had similar SMDI profiles, with significant elevations on Low Energy, Pessimism, Sad Mood, and Low Self-Esteem subscales compared with controls. Although both groups of medical patients were depressed compared with control subjects, their SMDI profiles were different from those previously reported for psychiatric inpatients with a diagnosis of depression.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Subcutaneous-PCA: an alternative to IV-PCA for postoperative pain management.
Patients (n = 120) undergoing major orthopedic (e.g., total hip replacement), urologic (e.g., radical prostatectomy), or gynecologic (e.g., total abdominal hysterectomy) procedures were randomly assigned to receive either morphine or oxymorphone postoperatively using a patient-controlled analgesic (PCA) delivery system. The opioid analgesic was administered either intravenously (IV-PCA) or subcutaneously (SQ-PCA) during the 72-h study period. ⋯ Postoperative analgesia scores and patient satisfaction were similar in all four PCA treatment groups. Thus, SQ-PCA with either oxymorphone or morphine represents a clinically acceptable alternative to IV-PCA in the treatment of postoperative pain.