European journal of pain : EJP
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Some patients who have sustained whiplash injuries present with chronic widespread pain and mechanical allodynia. This single-blind, case control matched study of 43 chronic whiplash patients sought to examine psychophysical responses to non-noxious stimuli and their relationship to psychological profiles. Symptom Check List 90-R (SCL-90-R), Neck Disability Index and Shortform McGill Questionnaire were completed prior to testing. ⋯ Pain in response to non-noxious stimulation over presumably healthy tissues suggests that central mechanisms are responsible for ongoing pain in at least some whiplash patients. The additional findings of pain on punctate pressure and hyperalgesic responses to heat and cold stimuli are consistent with enhanced central responsiveness to nociceptor input. These results have important therapeutic and prognostic implications.
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While it may be convenient to categorize neuropathic pain syndromes on the basis of anatomical distribution or disease state (e.g., diabetic neuropathy, radiculopathy, postherpetic neuralgia), the treatment of neuropathic pain, alone, should also consider the signs and symptoms and the underlying putative mechanisms that may then be inferred from each individual's signs and symptoms. A diagnosis-based approach to treatment may not effectively relieve a patient's pain or improve his or her quality of life, the ultimate goal of treatment. Although research that supports a symptom- and mechanism-based approach to treating neuropathic pain is ongoing and dynamic, the preclinical and clinical data available thus far form an initial rational framework within which we may attempt to target putative pain mechanisms.
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The continuous intrathecal infusion of drugs with implantable and programmable pumps is commonly used for the treatment of otherwise intractable pain and spasticity. There is now a consensus that it is possible to use mixtures of two or even three drugs in selected cases. ⋯ These values are determined from the desired quantity of each drug to be infused in 24h, the concentration of each drug solution and the volume of the reservoir. It is essential that the drugs do not react with one another, that they will remain stable in the reservoir at body temperature and that they are safe for a long-term infusion.
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Although the modified Stroop paradigm is considered to be a prominent paradigm for investigating selective attention in emotional disorders, relatively few studies have applied this paradigm to examine selective attention in chronic pain patients. Moreover, the results from these studies are not robust. The purpose of this article is to review the evidence for attentional bias in chronic pain patients, by means of a meta-analysis. ⋯ Thus, the results from the present meta-analysis on studies applying the modified Stroop paradigm suggest that chronic pain patients selectively attend to both pain sensory and pain affective stimuli. Furthermore, the MD estimation did not depend on the methodological quality, tentatively indicating that even though studies differed in methodology, the results were rather consistent. Implications of the results are discussed.