Pain physician
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Fascial plane block techniques have evolved considerably in recent years. Unlike the conventional peripheral nerve block methods, the fascial plane block's effect can be predicted based on fascial anatomy and does not require a clear vision of the target nerves. The anatomy of the retroperitoneal interfascial space is complex, since it comprises multiple compartments, including the transversalis fascia (TF), the retroperitoneal fasciae (RF), and the peritoneum. For this reason, an in-depth, accurate understanding of the retroperitoneal interfascial space's anatomical characteristics is necessary for perceiving the related regional blocks and mechanisms that lie underlie the dissemination of local anesthetics (LAs) outside or within the various retroperitoneal compartments. ⋯ Familiarity with the anatomy of the retroperitoneal fascial space could enhance our understanding of peripheral nerve blocks. By examining the circulation in the fascial space, we may gain a more comprehensive understanding of the direction and degree of injectate diffusion during RA as well as the block's plane and scope, possibly resulting in effective analgesia and fewer harmful clinical consequences.
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Over the past 3 decades, clinicians and scholars have used and studied the stellate ganglion block (SGB) extensively, making this field a highly anticipated research hot spot. To the best of our knowledge, there has been no bibliometric analysis of the SGB until now. ⋯ This comprehensive bibliometric analysis conducted a complete overview of SGB research, which was helpful in furthering our understanding of research trends and locating research hot spots and gaps in this domain. This field is developing rapidly and will garner significant and continuous attention from future scholars.
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Melatonin, one of the most versatile hormones in the body, is well appreciated in managing circadian rhythm and for antioxidant properties. Produced in the pineal gland and within mitochondria, melatonin influences many physiologic processes through receptor mediated and direct effects. ⋯ Based on the present systematic review, melatonin plays a critical role in sleep, but evolving studies have demonstrated substantive roles in mitigating degenerative conditions in various tissues, including IVD degeneration. Ongoing studies will better clarify the role of melatonin as a potential therapeutic agent, including the targeted delivery to various body regions.
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The gender bias in academic anesthesiology is well known. Women are not only a minority in the field but also underrepresented in leadership positions. Reported reasons for this underrepresentation include barriers to career advancement, lack of mentorship, and differences in compensation, among others. Interventional pain, a competitive procedural subspecialty of anesthesiology, sees the trickle-down effects of this disparity. According to a report from the ACGME that sorted medical subspecialties by number of female trainees, pain medicine ranked in the bottom quartile across all disciplines from 2008-2016. ⋯ While the gender disparity in academia is well documented for both anesthesiology and pain medicine, the reasons for this disparity have not been fully explored. Moreover, it is also unknown whether the minority of female physicians who select pain medicine as a subspecialty gravitate toward an academic or a private-practice path. To address the existing gender disparity, it is necessary to explore the landscape of interventional pain medicine in both academic and private practices and understand pain physicians' beliefs and sentiments regarding their subspecialty.
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Newer definitions of pain remain suggestive of categorization by mainly neurological or psychological bases. All pain recruits cortical interpretation for any sort of directive effects in awareness, attention, and action. That unity of purpose in pain's multi-pathway manifestations can inspire neurophilosophical reflections on the existentiality, subjectivity, and sociality of pain. ⋯ Pain's prescription will remain unfilled until its full reality is recognized at a personal level, where comprehensive care is mobilized for the whole patient. Heeding pain looks to the central figure that is never absent from any painful situation, namely the individual person-in-pain. That holistic and humanistic value to mobilizing resources against pain should be reflected in the practice of pain medicine, and the craft of the pain physician.