Pain physician
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Editorial Review
Delineating the Hurtful, Engaging, Emotive, and Directive (HEED) Dimensions of Pain. Characterization for Clinical Relevance.
Pain is an objective, natural reality among sentient creatures that possess cognition and mobility sufficient for apprehending and acting upon its full significance. Defining pain mostly in mental terms makes sense for self-conscious psychology and vocabulary. Pain as a natural capacity among animals did not evolve merely to be aligned with human semantics and intuitions. ⋯ So delineated, pain evolved to be HEED-ed. Our proposed operational delimitation at first glance appears to be physiological, but its reliance upon the bio-psychosocial actuality of the painient organism renders it inter-theoretically reducible and expandable. This delineation of pain necessitates its being HEED-ed by the organism in which it occurs; and hence ethically heeded by those who profess to study and treat it.
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Review
Older and Better: A Narrative Review of Successful Aging and Adaptation to Pain in Late Life.
"Invariably, the self-assessed QoL was far better than I, as a physician, would have anticipated from the diseases and disabilities that you reported." -Ben Eiseman, MD, based on a survey of his octogenarian Yale University classmates. ⋯ Chronic pain is common in the elderly and is not adequately treated. Data indicate that older persons can benefit from guidance toward distinct attitudes and actions they can employ to cope with persistent pain. Epidemiologic and aging literature describe attitudes and behaviors that facilitate health and wellbeing during aging. Data from gerontology and from research on chronic pain in elderly patients converge upon factors that are common to better adaptation to both aging and late-life pain. I describe these common factors, which I categorize as treatment-factors, traits, attitudes, and actions. Two cases are presented to demonstrate these concepts.
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Post-COVID pain (PCP) is a condition that ensues from an infection of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Some researchers have explored the prevalence of PCP and its characteristics in the individuals who experience it. However, most individuals involved in the previous studies were middle-aged, and those studies focused mainly on hospital patients and musculoskeletal PCP. Existing data on PCP and its subtypes among older adults and outpatients are scanty. ⋯ Our study found a PCP prevalence of 9.4% in nonhospitalized older adults who had survived COVID-19. Number of COVID-19 symptoms and history of previous chronic pain seemed to be potential risk factors for PCP. Neuropathic PCP was associated with lower QoL and a more severe depression level.
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Observational Study
Long-term Follow-up of the Effectiveness and Safety of High-voltage Pulsed Radiofrequency Treatment for Infraorbital Neuralgia: A Retrospective Study.
Infraorbital neuralgia is a refractory facial pain that may cause various psychological disorders. There is no optimal treatment for infraorbital neuralgia because few relevant studies have been conducted. Pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) is a minimally invasive procedure that has been proven effective in treating trigeminal neuralgia and other painful diseases. Our previous study demonstrated that high-voltage PRF was effective in patients with infraorbital neuralgia. However, there is little literature on the long-term follow-up of infraorbital neuralgia treated with high-voltage PRF with a large sample size. ⋯ Computed tomography-guided high-voltage PRF treatment provides a minimally invasive and effective treatment option for patients with infraorbital neuralgia who fail conservative treatment, which could be considered as a preferred treatment before more invasive treatments.
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Observational Study
Iliotibial-Band and Gluteus Medius Percutaneous Ultrasound Tenotomy for Refractory Trochanteric Pain Syndrome: A Longitudinal Observational Study with One-Year Durability Results.
Greater trochanteric pain syndrome (GTPS) is a common cause of lateral hip pain that affects patients' quality of life and functioning. The condition is often associated with tightness of the iliotibial band (ITB) and tendinopathy of the gluteus medius (GMed) tendon, which are subjected to excessive stress and inflammation. A traditional treatment for GTPS is conservative medical management (CMM), which includes but is not limited to physiotherapy, oral anti-inflammatory medication, and/or local steroid injections. Surgery is performed when these treatments fail. The failure of these techniques indicates that some treatments classified as CMM may not be feasible for some patients. ⋯ This study demonstrated the feasibility and efficacy of combined GMed-ITB PUT as a novel treatment for GTPS in patients who failed CMM. The results showed significant and durable improvement in pain, function, and quality of life at the one-year follow-up. Our study suggests that both ITB and GMed tendons are involved in the pathogenesis of GTPS. The present study compared favorably with previous studies that reported outcomes of either ITB PUT or GMed PUT alone, implying that combining the approaches may offer superior benefits. Furthermore, the study had several strengths, such as the use of a validated outcome measure (VISA-G), the elimination of bias by independent practitioners, and the inclusion of a difficult population with severe pain.