European journal of pain : EJP
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To investigate the effect of chronic nociceptive pain on somatosensory perception, quantitative sensibility testing was performed in the most painful area and the homologous contralateral side in 14 patients with painful osteoarthritis of the hip. Twelve patients were reassessed in a painfree state 6-14 months following surgery. Von Frey filaments were used to test low-threshold mechanoreceptive function. ⋯ Compared to controls, patients had increased sensitivity to pressure pain in the most painful area (p < 0.002), bilaterally increased sensitivity to innocuous warmth (p < 0.03), cold pain (p< 0.05) and a tendency toward bilaterally increased sensitivity to heat pain (p = 0.054) before surgery. In the painful area, patients' sensitivity to pressure pain decreased (p < 0.04) and, remaining within normal limits, sensitivity to light touch increased (p < 0.006) compared to values prior to surgery. No statistically significant differences between the groups were seen following surgery, indicating that the sensibility changes had been maintained by chronic nociceptive pain.
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The short form of the McGill Pain Questionnaire (SFMPQ) is a widely used instrument for assessing the quality of pain where use of the full form is not possible. To date however, this instrument has not been translated into the Greek language. ⋯ A Greek version of the SFMPQ (the GR-SFMPQ) has been constructed which has the properties of internal validity and consistency. It is easy to administer, easy to understand even for an elementary educational level and it is capable of describing multidimensionally the pain experience of chronic musculoskeletal pain patients.
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Clinical Trial
The influence of pain intensity on somatosensory perception in patients suffering from subacute/chronic lateral epicondylalgia.
A confounding factor in the analysis of chronic pain patients is the finding of signs of somatosensory disturbances not only in neuropathic pain patients but also in a subgroup of patients with musculoskeletal pain. The purpose was to investigate if patients suffering from subacute/chronic lateral epicondylalgia demonstrated altered sensibility, and if this was affected by pain intensity. At the start of the experiment, quantitative sensory testing (QST) (thermal, pressure pain, touch) was performed in the local pain area and in the area of pain referral. ⋯ In the affected arm only, weight lifting resulted in significantly increased pain intensity in the local (p<0.01) and referred (p<0.01) pain areas, respectively. Repeated muscle contractions resulted in altered somatosensory functions in both the affected arm and the unaffected arm, consequently not dependent on ongoing pain in the assessed area. Tactile perception thresholds increased significantly following pain provocation in the area of pain referral (p<0.04) only and normalized following injection of local anaesthetic (p<0.02), indicating that the sensitivity to light touch was altered by the nociceptive input from the affected arm.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
No effect of preoperative paracetamol and codeine suppositories for pain after termination of pregnancies in general anaesthesia.
Outpatient surgery demands rapid recovery and satisfied patients. The purpose of the study was to investigate whether rectal premedication with paracetamol and codeine would reduce the need of rescue analgesics, reduce the postoperative pain experience and result in faster eligibility for discharge. Ninety pregnant patients scheduled for day-case surgery with evacuation of the uterine cavity were randomly assigned into two groups. ⋯ The paracetamol and codeine patients were significantly more sleepy at 30 min postoperatively. There were no differences between the groups in postoperative nausea or vomiting and no difference in discharge eligibility. The use of pre-operative suppository with paracetamol 800 mg and codeine 60 mg is unnecessary in this group of patients.
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Clinical Trial
The symptom check-list, SCL-90-R: its use and characteristics in chronic pain patients.
The SCL-90-R is a widely-used questionnaire for self-report of psychological distress and multiple aspects of psychopathology, as part of the evaluation of chronic pain patients and other non-psychiatric populations. The aim of this study is the presentation of clinical results of this multidimensional questionnaire in a convenience sample of 3540 chronic pain patients treated in a multidisciplinary pain centre. ⋯ It is shown that the 9 dimensions postulated by Derogatis et al. (1977 a) cannot at all be distinguished in chronic pain patients. The use of single subscores of the SCL-90-R, often employed as a screening instrument for specific diagnoses, such as depression, is at least questionable in chronic pain patients.