European journal of pain : EJP
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To what degree can facial expression scales help children differentiate between the sensory and emotional aspects of the pain experience? This study examined the relationship between children's ratings on the Faces Pain Scale (an intensity measure), the Facial Affective Scale (an affective measure), and a paired mechanical visual analogue (MVAS) method for measuring the intensity and unpleasantness of pain. It was predicted that ratings on the Faces Pain Scale should correlate best with the MVAS measure of pain intensity rather than unpleasantness. Likewise, ratings on the Facial Affective Scale should correlate best with the MVAS measure of pain unpleasantness (assumed to reflect an emotional dimension) rather than intensity. ⋯ No systematic age effects were observed. In conclusion, the Faces Pain Scale and the Facial Affective Scale may partly measure different aspects of the pain experience in children, although it remains to be determined to what degree the obtained differences are clinically meaningful. Copyright 1999 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
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In a double-blind randomised study into post-operative pain relief by extradural PCA, 66 Caesarean section patients were divided in to three groups to receive either sufentanil (2 µ g/ml), tramadol (10 mg/ml) or a mixture of both. After a loading dose of 10 ml, patients were allowed to ask for additional boluses of 2.5 ml, respecting a lock-out time of 10 min and a 1-h limit of 10 ml. Every 6 h, VAS pain scores, consumption of drugs, number of demands and side-effects were registered. ⋯ It may be concluded that the extradural use of tramadol is less beneficial than previously reported. Due to disturbing side-effects, relatively high dose requirements (even after the addition of a lipophilic opioid) and somewhat inferior analgesic quality, its extradural administration for postoperative pain relief cannot be recommended. Copyright 1999 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
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Dose-dependency and time course of hyperalgesia and erythema following UVA (16.8 and 36 J/cm(2)) and UVB (one and three times the minimum erythema threshold) irradiation was investigated in 10 healthy human subjects. Skin patches (1.5 cm in diameter) on the ventral side of the upper leg were irradiated with UVA or UVB light. Hyperaemia (Laser Doppler flowmetry, infrared thermography), thermal hyperalgesia to radiant heat stimuli, and mechanical hyperalgesia to controlled impact stimuli were tested at 1, 6, 12, 24, 48 and 96 h after irradiation. ⋯ It is concluded that UVB- but not UVA-irradiation is a suitable experimental model of subacute thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia. The different time courses of erythema and hyperalgesia indicate that inflammatory mediators responsible for vasodilatation are not identical with those inducing hyperalgesia. Copyright 1999 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain.
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After intramuscular (m. tibialis anterior) injection of three different algogenic substances, the pain intensity was continuously scored on a visual analogue scale (VAS) in eight volunteers. The subject drew the distribution of the local and referred pain areas on a map. Four times within the first hour after injection, the pressure pain-thresholds (PPTs) and supra pressure-pain thresholds were assessed at the injection point, 2 cm distal from the injection site, at the arm, and at the contralateral leg. ⋯ We conclude that under the present experimental conditions, BKN and 5-HT can produce low levels of muscle pain after intramuscular injection. In the used concentrations, however, BKN, 5-HT, and SP did not generate cutaneous or muscular hyperalgesia. Copyright 1999 European Federation of Chapters of the International Association for the Study of Pain.