Articles: chronic-pain.
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The Ochsner journal · Jan 2014
ReviewAvailability and utilization of opioids for pain management: global issues.
Pain can significantly influence an individual's health status and can have serious negative consequences: poor nutrition, decreased appetite, abnormal sleep patterns, fatigue, and impairment of daily living activities. Pain can cause psychological impairment and decrease healing and recovery from injuries and illness. A hallmark of many chronic conditions, pain affects more patients' lives than diabetes mellitus, heart disease, and cancer combined. However, many chronic sufferers do not have access to effective pain management for a variety of reasons, including limited access, restrictions, and personal and cultural biases. ⋯ Comprehensive guidelines for goal-directed and patient-friendly chronic opiate therapy will potentially enhance the outlook for future chronic pain management. The improvement of pain education in undergraduate and postgraduate training will benefit patients and clinicians. The promise of new medications, along with the utilization of multimodal approaches, has the potential to provide effective pain relief to future generations of sufferers.
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Int J Clin Exp Hypn · Jan 2014
Case ReportsPosthypnotic use of olfactory stimulus for pain management.
Chronic pain due to disease or injury persists even after interventions to alleviate these conditions. Opiates are not always effective for the patient and have undesirable side effects. Hypnosis has been shown to be an effective treatment and may be enhanced by the use of olfactory stimulation as a posthypnotic cue. The article details 2 case reports that demonstrate the possible benefits of olfactory stimulus as an adjunct to hypnosis for pain relief.
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Am J Phys Med Rehabil · Jan 2014
Comparative StudyMoving beyond the limitations of the visual analog scale for measuring pain: novel use of the general labeled magnitude scale in a clinical setting.
Quantifying pain intensity is challenging, particularly for patients with chronic pain. The visual analog scale (VAS) is limited by ceiling effects that often leave patients with no ability to quantify worsening pain. The goal of this study was to determine whether the general Labeled Magnitude Scale (gLMS) can be feasibly used to measure pain clinically while overcoming limitations of the VAS. ⋯ These results suggest that the gLMS has great potential and can be feasibly used to measure pain intensity clinically. The gLMS scores were consistently lower than the VAS scores, thus reducing the ceiling effect and allowing range at the high end of the scale for rating worsening pain.
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J Back Musculoskelet Rehabil · Jan 2014
The prevalence of fibromyalgia among patients with cervical radiculopathy due to cervical disc herniation: a pilot study.
Cervical disc herniation (CDH) is the most common cause of cervical radiculopathy and could overlap with fibromyalgia (FM). ⋯ The prevalences of FM and widespread pain in patients with CDH were found as 11.5% and 78.8% respectively.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2014
Case ReportsSpinal Epidural Hematoma After Spinal Cord Stimulator Trial Lead Placement in a Patient Taking Aspirin.
Spinal epidural hematoma is a rare, but potentially devastating, consequence of accessing the epidural space for anesthesia or interventional pain procedures. There is no consensus to stop aspirin therapy before interventional chronic pain procedures. ⋯ The only variable that could have led to our patient's epidural hematoma is aspirin. This is the first reported case of aspirin leading to an epidural hematoma following an interventional chronic pain procedure. Prior to interventional pain procedures, one should contemplate cessation of aspirin therapy because there are, at present, no consensus guidelines to direct such a decision.