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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Conditions in which antidepressants have been used include diabetic neuropathy, postherpetic neuralgia,
headaches
, arthritis, chronic back pain, cancer, thalamic pain, facial pain, and
phantom limb pain
. Although much of the available information is derived from inadequately controlled trials, it seems that antidepressants provide analgesia in many of these disorders. The analgesic effects tend to be independent of antidepressant effects, and doses of heterocyclic antidepressants used for analgesia seem to be lower than those considered effective in the treatment of depression. Doses should be started low and gradually increased until the patient reaches the highest tolerable dose. Onset of analgesia is variable, ranging from 1 day to 10 weeks. Common side effects include dry mouth, drowsiness, urinary retention, orthostatic hypotension, and constipation. Optimum dosages and schedules have not been established.
...
PMID:Antidepressants in the management of chronic pain syndromes. 214 20
A number of investigators in recent years have called for the development of devices that can monitor surface EMG levels in individuals' normal environments for use with patients who suffer from disorders in which the etiology or maintenance of the pathology is presumed to be due at least in part to musculoskeletal dysfunction, such as low back pain,
phantom limb pain
and tension headache. This study examined the test-retest reliability of just such a device. Twenty-six healthy controls wore a lightweight (24 ounce) device which measured bilateral upper trapezius EMG, as well as peak and integral motion, for 5 consecutive days for up to 18 h each day. ANOVAs on the four measures revealed no difference between any of the four measures over the 5 days. Intra-class correlation coefficients for the two EMG variables across 5 days were both significant with alpha levels set at 0.01. The two EMG measures were highly correlated (r = 0.77); the two motion measures were also highly correlated (r = 0.60), but at a lower magnitude than EMG values; the relationship between EMG and motion was significant, but the magnitude of the between EMG motion correlations (0.26 and 0.35) were lower than the within EMG or motion ones. It was concluded that the test-retest reliability of the ambulatory monitoring device is within acceptable limits. Implications for the use of the device with musculoskeletal pain disorders--particularly
headache
--are discussed.
...
PMID:Reliability of an ambulatory electromyographic activity device for musculoskeletal pain disorders. 799 77
In Germany patients with chronic pain are often undertreated. It is necessary to establish more specialized institutions for pain therapy. As pain therapy is time consuming and labor intensive the costs must be justified by quality and efficiency. METHODS. We analyzed the new patients who came to our pain clinic in 1990 and compared the previous nonspecialist pain-related treatment with our pain therapy. For each patient we recorded the duration of pain therapy in the past, the number of physicians involved in the treatment, the number and duration of hospital stays and the number of operations carried out to relieve pain. For our pain therapy we recorded the number of treatments on an outpatient basis, the number of patients who were hospitalized and the number of hospital days. The outcome of our pain therapy was determined on a visual analogue scale (VAS). Pain relief of more than 50% was defined as adequate pain therapy. RESULTS. In 1990 we treated 379 new patients in our pain clinic. The largest group (140, 37%) had pain of the muscle or skeletal system. A further 75 patients (18%) had neuropathic pain, 66 (17%) suffered from cancer pain, several types of
headache
were found in 57 patients (15%), 19 patients (5%) had
phantom limb pain
, 11 (3%) suffered from reflex sympathetic dystrophy, and we diagnosed psychogenic pain in 11 patients (3%). On average the patients had been treated for their pain over a period of 10 years by eight different physicians. Patients suffering from migraine had the longest duration of preliminary therapy (19.2 years), while patients with cancer pain were pretreated for 2, 3 years in the period before. 80% (n = 302) of all patients were hospitalized at least once. A total of 20,959 hospital treatment days was registered. At least one operation was performed in 34% of the patients (n = 130) to relieve the pain. For all patients the pain relief afforded by the preliminary therapy was insufficient. In our pain therapy the patients had on average 6.5 outpatient appointments. We hospitalized 45 patients (12%), for a mean of 11 days. During the observation period 74% of the patients (n = 280) obtained pain relief of more than 50% in comparison with the start of treatment. CONCLUSION. The findings of our retrospective study demonstrate that specialized pain therapy is evidently effective. If such therapy is instituted early enough, chronic pain can be prevented. Shorter duration of disease, fewer stays in hospitals and less absence from work could reduce the economic costs of chronic pain. It is necessary to make specialised pain therapy a regular component of clinical practice; this means redoubling our efforts concerning education and experimental and clinical studies. The efficiency of pain therapy must be documented in order to improve the care of patients with chronic pain.
...
PMID:[Analysis of the therapy of chronic pain. A comparison of previous therapy and specialized pain therapy]. 848 Sep 4
Patients suffering from vascular disease are often a challenge for the acute pain service. Ischaemia, impaired wound healing, stump and
phantom limb pain
often require a complex analgesic regimen. Invasive measures such as spinal or epidural catheters can be very helpful but carry the risk of infection, as shown by this case report. A 53-year-old woman with a ten-year history of diabetes developed arterial vascular disease. Her right lower leg had been amputated two years previously. She was now admitted with necroses of the left forefoot. A bypass operation was performed under general anaesthesia. Because of intractable ischaemic pain, she was provided with an epidural catheter by the acute pain service. The bypass occluded, however, and a few days later her left lower leg also had to be amputated, this operation being performed under epidural anaesthesia with bupivacaine. The catheter was subsequently used for postoperative pain control and as a means to prevent
phantom limb pain
. When signs of superficial catheter infection were noticed days later, the catheter was immediately removed. Intractable pain then developed in the left leg which could not be sufficiently controlled with opioids and NSAIDs, and so a second epidural catheter was inserted one segment rostrally. Several days later the infected vascular prosthesis had to be removed followed by amputation of the thigh, this operation also being performed in epidural anaesthesia. Eleven days after insertion of the first epidural catheter, the patient complained of low back pain and
headache
. Examination by a neurologist revealed no signs of intraspinal infection. The second epidural catheter dislocated at this point in time and it was decided to introduce a third one, this being the only means to treat the otherwise intractable stump pain. Ten days later meningism, Kernig's sign and leucocytosis developed. NMR tomography detected intraspinal fluid in the epidural space at the dorsal border of the spinal canal. A hemilaminectomy was performed. The spinal epidural space showed signs of inflammation of the adipose tissue, but no pus. A little necrotic material and residues of an old haematoma were removed and the epidural space was lavaged. Specimens taken from the epidural material revealed colonisation with staphylococcus epidermidis, which was sensitive to the broad spectrum antibiotics formerly given to the patient to treat the infection in the left stump. By the next day, all signs of epiduritis had disappeared and the patient recovered completely.
...
PMID:[Epiduritis after long-term pain therapy with an epidural catheter--review of the literature with a current case report]. 932 67
The development of chronic pain after surgery is not an uncommon event. Despite increased attention devoted to this topic in the recent medical literature, little is known about the underlying mechanisms, natural history, and response to therapy of each syndrome. Central nervous system plasticity that occurs in response to tissue injury may contribute to the development of persistent postsurgical pain. As evidence continues to accumulate concerning the role of central sensitization in the prolongation of postoperative pain, many researchers have focused on methods to prevent central neuroplastic changes from occurring through the use of preemptive or preventative analgesic techniques. Effective preventative analgesic techniques may be useful in reducing not only acute pain but also chronic postsurgical pain and disability. This review examines the efficacy of using a variety of analgesic techniques aimed at preventing or reducing chronic pain after surgery. Specific chronic postsurgical pain syndromes evaluated include complex regional pain syndrome,
phantom limb pain
, chronic donor site pain, post-thoracotomy pain syndrome, and postmastectomy pain syndrome.
Curr Pain
Headache
Rep 2007 Feb
PMID:Chronic pain after surgery: what can we do to prevent it. 1721 15
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) for pain was one of the earliest indications for the therapy. This study reports the outcome of DBS of the sensory thalamus and the periventricular and peri-aqueductal grey area (PVG/PAG) complex for different intractable neuropathic pain syndromes. Forty-seven patients (30 males and 17 females) were selected for surgery; they were suffering from any of the following types of pain: post-stroke neuropathic pain,
phantom limb pain
, post-herpetic neuralgia, anaesthesia dolorosa, brachial plexus injury and neuropathic pain secondary to neural damage from a variety of causes. Of the 47 patients selected for trial stimulation, 38 patients proceeded to permanent implantation. Patients suffering from post-stroke pain were the most likely to fail trial stimulation (33%), in contrast to individuals with phantom limb/post-brachial plexus injury pain and anaesthesia dolorosa, all of whom underwent permanent implantation. PVG stimulation alone was optimal in 17 patients (53%), whilst a combination of PVG and thalamic stimulation produced the greatest degree of analgesia in 11 patients (34%). Thalamic stimulation alone was optimal in 4 patients (13%). DBS of the PVG alone was associated with the highest degree of pain alleviation, with a mean improvement of 59% (p <0.001) and a > or =50% improvement in 66% of patients. Post-stroke pain responds in 70% of patients. We conclude that the outcomes of surgery appear to vary according to aetiology, but it would appear that the effects are best for phantom limb syndromes,
head pain
and anaesthesia dolorosa.
...
PMID:Deep brain stimulation for neuropathic pain. 1769 Dec 96
A variety of neurological problems have affected the lives of giants in the jazz genre. Cole Porter courageously remained prolific after severe leg injuries secondary to an equestrian accident, until he succumbed to osteomyelitis, amputations, depression, and
phantom limb pain
. George Gershwin resisted explanations for uncinate seizures and personality change and herniated from a right temporal lobe brain tumor, which was a benign cystic glioma. Thelonious Monk had erratic moods, reflected in his pianism, and was ultimately mute and withdrawn, succumbing to cerebrovascular events. Charlie Parker dealt with mood lability and drug dependence, the latter emanating from analgesics following an accident, and ultimately lived as hard as he played his famous bebop saxophone lines and arpeggios. Charles Mingus hummed his last compositions into a tape recorder as he died with motor neuron disease. Bud Powell had severe posttraumatic
headaches
after being struck by a police stick defending Thelonious Monk during a Harlem club raid.
...
PMID:Neurological problems of jazz legends. 1966 87
The neurobiology of chronic pain, including chronic daily
headache
(CDH) is not completely understood. "Pain memory" hypothesis is one of the mechanisms for
phantom limb pain
. We reviewed the literature to delineate a relation of "pain memory" for the development of CDH. There is a direct relation of pain to memory. Patients with poor memory have less chance to develop "pain memory", hence less possibility to develop chronic pain. Progressive memory impairment may lead to decline in
headache
prevalence. A similar relation of pain is also noted with emotional or psychiatric symptoms. Literature review suggests that there is marked overlap in the neural network of pain to that of memory and emotions. We speculate that pain, memory, and emotions are interrelated in triangular pattern, and each of these three is related to other two in bidirectional pattern, i.e., stimulation of one of these will stimulate other symptoms/networks and vice versa (triangular theory for chronic pain). Longstanding or recurrent noxious stimuli will strengthen this interrelation, and this may be responsible for chronicity of pain. Reduction of both chronic pain and psychological symptoms by cognitive behavioral therapy or psychological interventions further suggests a bidirectional interrelation between pain and emotion. Longitudinal studies are warranted on the prevalence of
headache
and other painful conditions in patients with progressive memory impairment to delineate the relation of pain to memory. Interrelation of
headache
to emotional symptoms should also be explored.
J
Headache
Pain 2011 Jun
PMID:Phantom headache: pain-memory-emotion hypothesis for chronic daily headache? 2147 4
Invasive neurostimulation therapies may be proposed to patients with neuropathic pain refractory to conventional medical management, in order to improve pain relief, functional capacity, and quality of life. In this review, the respective mechanisms of action and efficacy of peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS), nerve root stimulation (NRS), spinal cord stimulation (SCS), deep brain stimulation (DBS), and motor cortex stimulation (MCS) are discussed. PNS appears to be useful in various refractory neuropathic pain indications (as long as there is some preservation of sensation in the painful area), such as intractable chronic
headache
, pelvic and perineal pain, and low back pain, but evidence for its efficacy is not strongly conclusive, and large-scale randomized controlled studies are necessary to confirm the efficacy in the long term. Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been validated for the treatment of selected types of chronic pain syndromes, such as Failed Back Surgery Syndrome, and Complex Regional Pain Syndrome type I. When neuropathic pain is secondary to a brain lesion (especially following stroke) or a trigeminal lesion, stimulation of brain structures is required. Deep brain stimulation (DBS), which can be proposed with targets like the periventricular/periaqueductal gray matter or the sensory thalamus, is increasingly replaced by motor cortex stimulation (MCS), mainly because it is safer, more easily performed, and probably more effective in a wider range of indications (including central post-stroke pain). The respective places of DBS and MCS in some selected indications, such as peripheral neuropathic pain and
phantom limb pain
, have yet to be clearly delineated. Controlled trials, with the stimulator switched ON or OFF in a double-blind procedure, have demonstrated the efficacy of MCS in the treatment of peripheral and central neuropathic pain, although these trials included a limited number of patients and need to be confirmed by large, controlled, multicenter studies. Despite technical progress in neurosurgical navigation, guided by neuroimaging and intraoperative electrophysiology to optimize electrode positioning, MCS results are still variable, and validated criteria for selecting good candidates for implantation are lacking, except clinical response to preoperative rTMS, which showed correlations with a good response to MCS-induced analgesia. However, the evidence in favor of this technique is sufficient to include it in the range of treatment options for refractory neuropathic pain.
...
PMID:Invasive stimulation therapies for the treatment of refractory pain. 2311 79
Chronic pain is usually underestimated in children, due to lack of knowledge and its specific signs. In addition to suffering, chronic pain causes a physical, psychological, emotional, social, and financial burden for the child and his family. Practitioners may find themselves in a situation of failure with depletion of medical resources. Some types of chronic pain are refractory to conventional systemic treatment and may require the use of regional anesthesia. Cancer pain is common in children and its medical management is sometimes insufficient. It is accessible to neuroaxial or peripheral techniques of regional anesthesia if it is limited to an area accessible to one of these techniques and no contraindications (e.g., thrombopenia) are present. Complex regional pain syndrome 1 is not rare in children and adolescents, but it often goes undiagnosed. Regional anesthesia may contribute to the treatment of complex regional pain syndrome 1, mainly in case of recurrence, because it provides rapid effective analgesia and allows rapid implementation of intensive physiotherapy. These techniques have also shown interest in
phantom limb pain
after limb amputation, but they remain controversial for erythromelalgia pain or chronic abdominopelvic pain. Finally, the treatment of postdural puncture
headache
due to cerebrospinal fluid leak can be treated by performing an epidural injection of the patient's blood, called a blood-patch. Finally, the management of children with chronic pain should be multidisciplinary (pediatrician, physiotherapist, psychologist, surgeon, anesthesiologist) to support the child and her problem in its entirety.
...
PMID:[Chronic pain and regional anesthesia in children]. 2395 71
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