Articles: pain-management.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Jul 2023
Randomized Controlled TrialThe anterior branch of the medial femoral cutaneous nerve innervates the anterior knee: a randomized volunteer trial.
The midline skin incision for total knee arthroplasty may be an important generator of chronic neuropathic pain. The incision is innervated by the medial femoral cutaneous nerve (MFCN), the intermediate femoral cutaneous nerves (IFCN) and the infrapatellar branch from the saphenous nerve. The MFCN divides into an anterior (MFCN-A) and a posterior branch (MFCN-P). The primary aim was to compare the areas anesthesized by MFCN-A versus MFCN-P block for coverage of the incision. ⋯ In half of the cases, a gap of non-anesthetized skin was present on the surgical midline incision after anesthesia of the saphenous nerve and the IFCN. This gap was covered by selective anesthesia of the MFCN-A without contribution from MFCN-P. The selective MFCN-A block may be relevant for diagnosis and interventional management of neuropathic pain due to injury of MFCN-A.
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Many questions regarding the clinical management of people experiencing pain and related health policy decision-making may best be answered by pragmatic controlled trials. To generate clinically relevant and widely applicable findings, such trials aim to reproduce elements of routine clinical care or are embedded within clinical workflows. In contrast with traditional efficacy trials, pragmatic trials are intended to address a broader set of external validity questions critical for stakeholders (clinicians, healthcare leaders, policymakers, insurers, and patients) in considering the adoption and use of evidence-based treatments in daily clinical care. ⋯ The meeting was organized by the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION) public-private partnership. The consensus process was informed by expert presentations, panel and consensus discussions, and a preparatory systematic review. In the context of pragmatic trials of pain treatments, we present fundamental considerations for the planning phase of pragmatic trials, including the specification of trial objectives, the selection of adequate designs, and methods to enhance internal validity while maintaining the ability to answer pragmatic research questions.
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Some patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) have features of nociplastic pain. While research suggests that many patients with nociplastic pain consume more opioids due to opioid nonresponsiveness, little is known about the impact of nociplastic pain and pain catastrophizing on opioid consumption and pain interference among adolescents and young adults (AYA) with SCD. The purpose of this study was to (1) characterize nociplastic pain and pain catastrophizing among AYA with SCD, and (2) determine whether these characterizations are associated with subsequent opioid consumption and pain interference 1 month after characterization. ⋯ In this sample of AYA with SCD, features of nociplastic pain predicted higher subsequent opioid consumption and pain interference. Being aware of nociplastic pain features in patients with SCD may better guide individualized pain management.
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Acute pain is a common and nearly universal experience that usually has a sudden onset and is limited in duration. It is a normal physiologic response to a noxious stimulus that can become pathologic if untreated or not treated effectively. Acute pain has a limited duration (<1 month) and often is caused by injury, trauma, or medical treatments such as surgery. ⋯ All current guidelines support using a multimodal approach to pain management and reserving use of opioids for patients with severe pain that cannot be managed with other agents. There are several new agents and formulations recently approved or in development for the treatment of acute pain. The recently approved co-crystal formulation of celecoxib and tramadol hydrochloride provides an additional option for acute pain management and utilizes a single-medication multimodal approach.
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Disparate care in the ED for minority populations with low back pain is a long-standing issue reported in the USA. Our objective was to compare care delivery for low back pain in Australian EDs between culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) and non-CALD patients. ⋯ Patients with low back pain from a CALD background, especially those lacking English proficiency, are significantly more likely to be imaged and admitted in Australian EDs. Future interventions improving the quality of ED care for low back pain should give special consideration to CALD patients.