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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This retrospective study was undertaken to determine the usefulness of intravenous regional anesthetic (IVRA) blocks containing ketorolac and lidocaine in the management of sympathetically-mediated pain, and to determine what factors, if any, predicted success with this technique. Sixty-one patients with
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
presenting to a university-affiliated teaching hospital's pain management center were evaluated. Patients underwent one or more treatments with IVRA blocks containing ketorolac and lidocaine. The duration of pain, site of extremity affected, pain symptomatology, duration of relief from the first IVRA block, absence of pain following a series of IVRA blocks and side-effects from the IVRA blocks were determined. Of the 61 patients, 16 had complete response (26 percent), 26 had a partial response (43 percent) and 19 had no response (31 percent) to the ketorolac-containing IVRA. The only symptom which predicted a failure with this therapy was allodynia. No patient had serious side effects from the IVRA block;
dizziness
following tourniquet release occurred in 41 percent (n = 25) of the patients. IVRA block containing ketorolac is a useful and minimally invasive technique for the management of patients with
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
.
...
PMID:Intravenous regional anesthesia with ketorolac-lidocaine for the management of sympathetically-mediated pain. 879 1
Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) is the new name for entities formerly known mostly as
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy
and Causalgia. Treatment of CRPS with either the calcium channel blocker nifedipine or the alpha-sympathetic blocker phenoxybenzamine was assessed in 59 patients, 12 with early stages of CRPS, 47 with chronic stage CRPS. In the early stage CRPS patients, 3 of 5 were cured with nifedipine and 8 of 9 (2 of whom had earlier received nifedipine) with phenoxybenzamine, for a cure rate of 92% (11 out of 12). In the chronic stage CRPS patients, 10 of 30 were cured with nifedipine; phenoxybenzamine cured 7 of 17 patients when administered as a first choice and another 2 of 7 patients who received nifedipine earlier, for a total late stage success rate of 40% (19 out of 47). The most common side effects necessitating discontinuing the drug were headaches for nifedipine and orthostatic
dizziness
, nausea and diarrhoea for phenoxybenzamine. All male patients on phenoxybenzamine experienced impotence, but this did not lead to discontinuing this agent and immediately disappeared after stopping the drug. These results once again stress the importance of early recognition of CRPS, and treatment with either of these drugs could be considered as a first choice for early CRPS, especially because in this series this treatment was not combined with physical therapy making it very cost-effective. In the chronic stage of CRPS, treatment with these drugs was much less successful (40%), even though it was always combined with physical therapy, but it can still be considered, either as a first choice or when other types of treatment have failed.
...
PMID:Complex regional pain syndrome (reflex sympathetic dystrophy and causalgia): management with the calcium channel blocker nifedipine and/or the alpha-sympathetic blocker phenoxybenzamine in 59 patients. 910 64
Gabapentin, which has been approved for add-on therapy of focal seizures, is increasingly used for treatment of neuropathic pain. Its analgesic effect is supposed to be due to reduction of glutamatergic transmission, improvement of GABAergic transmission and to binding to voltage-dependent calcium channels. Experimental studies demonstrated an ameliorating effect of gabapentin on neuropathic pain. Placebo-controlled studies revealed an efficacy of gabapentin against pain in diabetic neuropathy and postherpetic neuralgia and in prophylaxis of migraine. Case reports show an analgesic effect of gabapentin in trigeminus neuralgia and in
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
. The main adverse events are
dizziness
, ataxia and somnolence. Controlled studies, which compare the efficacy of gabapentin with that of the respective reference drug, are needed to evaluate its importance in treatment of pain.
...
PMID:[Gabapentin therapy for pain]. 1125 57
Gabapentin, which has been approved for add-on therapy of focal seizures, is increasingly used for treatment of neuropathic pain. Its analgesic effect is supposed to be due to reduction of glutamatergic transmission, improvement of GABAergic transmission and to binding to voltage-dependent calcium channels. Experimental studies demonstrated an ameliorating effect of gabapentin on neuropathic pain. Placebo-controlled studies revealed an efficacy of gabapentin against pain in diabetic neuropathy and postherpetic neuralgia and in prophylaxis of migraine. Case reports show an analgesic effect of gabapentin in trigeminus neuralgia and in
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
. The main adverse events are
dizziness
, ataxia and somnolence. Controlled studies, which compare the efficacy of gabapentin with that of the respective reference drug, are needed to evaluate its importance in treatment of pain.
...
PMID:[Gabapentin for therapy of neuropathic pain]. 1181 Mar 68
The objective of this paper is to investigate the effect of gabapentin in the earlier stage of
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
syndrome (RSD). Twenty-two patients diagnosed with RSD were enrolled. Initial gabapentin dosage was 600 mg/day. This dosage is increased gradually until a satisfactory pain level was reached. After this level, this dosage was maintained throughout the study. An exercise program was also applied to the patients. Provoked and static pain scores of the patients were obtained initially, at 3-day intervals for maintenance dosage determining, and at 6 weeks after the discharge. Functional improvement parameters were volumetric measurement; dynamometric measurement and third finger pulp-distal palmar crease distance measurement for hands; and metric circumferential measurement and range of motion for elbow, knee, and foot initially, at baseline, on the tenth day, upon discharge, and 6 weeks after the discharge. The mean maintenance dose of gabapentin was 1,145.46+/-377.6 mg/day (range, 900-1,800 mg/day). Improvements in spontaneous and provoked pain intensities were statistically significant. No statistically significant difference was obtained in functional improvement parameters.
Dizziness
in three patients, headache in two patients, and mild burning feeling in the tongue in one patient were the reported side effects. These symptoms resolved spontaneously in few days. Gabapentin cannot be recommended as the drug of choice, but it may be considered as one of the therapeutic alternatives in the management of pain due to RSD. We suggest that it is effective only for the pain and not for other symptoms of RSD. Serious side effects that will cause the patient to stop using the drug are rare.
...
PMID:The effect of gabapentin in earlier stage of reflex sympathetic dystrophy. 1689 21
Adjuvant analgesics are drugs that are not primarily used as analgesics but can produce analgesia in certain types of pain. Adjuvant analgesics can be administered together with non-opioid and opioid analgesics on each step of the WHO analgesic ladder. They should be given when an additional or specific indication exists, but should not be used as a substitute for a thorough treatment with opioids and nonopioids. Adjuvant analgesics can be classified into groups according to the type of pain to be treated: continuous neuropathic pain or lancinating neuropathic pain, sympathetically maintained pain, bone pain and those for multipurpose use. Adjuvant drugs used for continuous neuropathic pain include local anaesthetics, clonidine, capsaicin, and antidepressants. Tricyclic antidepressants are the group that have been best investigated, and are therefore the drugs of choice. An analgesic effect is probably produced via enhancement of transmitter concentrations in pain-modulating pathways. This occurs at lower doses than those necessary to treat depression. Anticholinergic actions, acute glaucoma, constipation, orthostatic hypotension and cardiac arrhythmias are adverse effects that are seen predominantly with teritiary amine drugs and less often with secondary amine compounds. Initial doses should be small to avoid these adverse effects. Local anaesthetics are used less often, because of the high incidence of side effects (especially with tocainide, flecainide). An analgesic effect has been described in neuropathic pain, however, probably due to membrane stabilization and reduction of aberrant signal conduction. Mexiletine is considered to be the safest local anaesthetic, and should be used initially in small doses (100-150 mg/d). If side effects do not occur, doses can be increased step-wise up to 900 mg/d. Local anaesthetics are indicated for the treatment of severe neuropathic pain; this treatment is contraindicated in patients with cardiac arrhythmias. Systemic or intrathecal clonidine can be tried in neuropathic pain refractory to opioid therapy. The same stands for the topical application of capsaicin in certain types of pain. Lancinating neuropathic pain is an indication for anticonvulsant drugs. Carbamazepine, clonazepam, valproate and phenytoin seem to reduce aberrant signal conduction in damaged nerves in a manner similar to the supression of epileptiform activities in the brain. Common side effects include sedation,
dizziness
and nausea. Of greater concern are the more severe side effects, such as bone marrow depression (carbamazepine) and hepatotoxicity (phenytoin, valproate). Low initial doses and stepwise increases in dosage, repeated blood counts, and monitoring of plasma levels are helpful in recognizing and avoiding these adverse effects. Baclofen, a GABA agonist primarily used for spasticity, is effective in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia and is often used in the management of lancinating pain of unspecific origin. The initial dosage is 10-15 mg/d, increasing to 30-90 mg/d, or higher. If neural blockade fails to reduce sympathetically maintained pain sufficiently specific adjuvants can be used. Sympatholytic drugs, e.g. phenoxybenzamine (60-120 mg/d) or prazosin, can be administered to patients without major cardiovascular dysfunction. There is experimental evidence of the involvement of calcium channels in nociception, and a beneficial clinical effect of nifidepine in
reflex sympathetic dystrophy
(
RDS
) has been demonstrated. Bone pain is common in tumor patients and can often be treated effectively with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Biphosphonates (etidronate, clodronate, pamidronate derivates) also produce analgesic effects in patients with bone metastases. However, differences among the various compounds have not been clearly evaluated yet. Potent and specific radioisotopes are still under development and the use of calcitonin in bone pain is considered controversial.
...
PMID:[Pharmacotherapy of cancer pain. 3. Adjuvant drugs.]. 1841 35