Articles: acute-pain.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Jan 2025
ReviewBuprenorphine versus full agonist opioids for acute postoperative pain management: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
Opioids continue to play a key role in managing acute postoperative pain, but their use contributes to adverse outcomes. Buprenorphine may offer effective analgesia with a superior safety profile. ⋯ CRD42023447715.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2025
Multi-Institutional Study of Multimodal Analgesia Practice, Pain Trajectories, and Recovery Trends After Spine Fusion for Idiopathic Scoliosis.
Posterior spinal fusion (PSF) surgery for correction of idiopathic scoliosis is associated with chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). In this multicenter study, we describe perioperative multimodal analgesic (MMA) management and characterize postoperative pain, disability, and quality of life over 12 months after PSF in adolescents and young adults. ⋯ MMA strategies showed site-specific variability and decreasing yearly trends of in-hospital opioid use without changes in acute or chronic pain after PSF. There was a high incidence of persistent pain associated with disability and poor quality of life warrants postoperative surveillance to enable functional recovery.
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Research has indicated that the default mode network (DMN) is perturbated in patients with chronic pain when compared with healthy controls, and this perturbation is correlated with the duration of pain during the chronic pain stage. It remains unclear whether DMN adaptations manifest during the subacute pain stage and progress over time because of the duration of pain experience, rather than being a specific correlate of the chronic pain stage. Furthermore, information regarding whether these adaptations are related to cognitive processes of adaptation is lacking. ⋯ This was significantly mediated by coping attitudes towards pain. Default mode network perturbation may thus reflect neural adaptation processes to pain experience rather than a single correlate of the chronic pain stage and be modulated by cognitive adaption. This points to potentially underinvestigated significant adaptation processes that could enable more fine-grained patient stratification.