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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain
, weakness, or paralysis from involvement of the spinal cord and nerve roots secondary to invasion of the vertebrae by a
malignant tumor
often can be avoided or alleviated by stabilization of the spine. Twelve patients with neoplastic infiltration of the cervical vertebrae were so treated. The operation of wiring, augmentation bone-grafting, and decompression of the spinal cord was successful after conservative methods failed. Indications for operation were: (1) unremitting
pain
in the neck, not relieved by bracing or radiation therapy; (2) a major degree of vertebral destruction with loss, or impending loss, of support for the head; (3) collapse of a vertebral body; or (4) neural deficit from local tumor invasion. A classification of our twelve patients into three groups helped to delineate the surgical procedure needed. The value of obtaining spinal stability and a solid fusion above and below the tumor was evident in eleven patients. For almost all of their survival time, they were comfortable. Surgical treatment may not appreciably extend the lenght of a patient's survival, but it generally improves the patient's quality of life.
...
PMID:Metastatic tumors involving the cervical vertebrae: surgical palliation. 8 Dec 9
Surgery is the modality of choice in curative treatment for
cancer
of the colon and rectum. Since a majority of the patients present advanced disease where the surgical outlook is poor, adjuvant therapy may be warranted. Clinical and experimental data demonstrate the benefits from preoperative radiation therapy and some clinical reports indicate the beneficial effects of postoperative radiotherapy. Two national studies are underway to determine the effectiveness of preoperative radiation therapy in moderate doses. A similar study is suggested to establish the effectiveness of postoperative radiation therapy.For patients who are poor surgical risks, or for a tumor which is considered to be inoperable, and in a selected group, radiation therapy can be used as a curative procedure. Advantages include eliminating the need for a permanent colostomy. In case of failure, electrocoagulation and abdominal perineal resection are still available alternatives.A modest amount of radiation therapy can afford maximum palliation with minimum discomfort to the patient. About 80-90 percent of patients with
pain
and bleeding and 50 percent of patients with symptomatic liver metastasis respond favorably.
...
PMID:Carcinoma of the rectum and rectosigmoid colon: role of radiation therapy. 8 20
The Brompton mixture is a highly effective, flexible, safe and convenient means to control chronic pain of malignant disease. The mixture is a solution containing morphine, the dose of narcotic varying with the need for analgesia, and is given regularly, usually every 4 hours, with a phenothiazine. The main aims of therapy are prevention of
pain
rather than treatment, an unclouded sensorium and a normal effect. Terminally ill
cancer
patients were given the Brompton mixture and a phenothiazine in an attempt to control their
pain
. The mixture was administered to patients in 3 hospital environments: 1) a palliative care unit, 2) general wards and 3) private rooms.
Pain
was measured in 92 patients with the McGill-Melzack
pain
questionnaire. The Brompton mixture controlled
pain
in 90 per cent of patients in the palliative care unit and in 75 to 80 per cent of patients in the wards or private rooms. The differences in
pain
scores between patients in the palliative care unit and the other groups were significant. The mixture produced substantial decreases in the 3 major dimensions of
pain
: 1) sensory, 2) affective and 3) evaluative. Comparison of these results with data obtained in an outpatient
pain
clinic showed that the Brompton mixture was strikingly more effective than the traditional methods of managing cancer pain.
...
PMID:The management of intractable pain in patients with advanced malignant disease. 8 92
Eleven patients with advanced multiple myeloma refractory to standard chemotherapy were treated with a regimen of sequential hemi-body radiotherapy consisting of 800 rad midplane in a single dose to each half. 9/10 patients experienced significant relief of skeletal
pain
and there were 5/11 objective tumor responses with one complete remission. Treatment-related morbidity was significant and consisted primarily of nausea and emesis, bone marrow suppression, and pneumonitis. This therapy is helpful in the management of advanced myeloma, and should be studied earlier in the course of the disease.
Cancer
1979 Jan
PMID:Sequential hemi-body radiotherapy in advanced multiple myeloma. 8 3
Arterial occlusion of the internal iliac artery was successful in the relief of
pain
due to primary and secondary neoplasms of the bony pelvis in 8 of 9 patients. These included 3 giant cell tumors, 1 aneurysmal bone cyst, 1 recurrent chondrosarcoma, 3 metastatic renal cell carcinoma and 1 metastatic clear cell sarcoma. Calcification of the margin of the lesion occurred in 3 of 4 primary neoplasms after infarction. The transcatheter arterial occlusion was accomplished utilizing Gelfoam and stainless steel coils. Although most patients experienced
pain
and fever for several days following the procedure, no permanent sequelae or complications were encountered.
Cancer
1979 Jan
PMID:Arterial occlusion of pelvic bone tumors. 8 5
The Brompton mixture is a highly effective, flexible, safe and convenient means to control chronic pain of malignant disease. The mixture is a solution containing morphine, the dose of narcotic varying with the need for analgesia, and is given regularly, usually every 4 hours, with a phenothiazine. The main aims of therapy are prevention of
pain
rather than treatment, an unclouded sensorium and a normal effect. Terminally ill
cancer
patients were given the Brompton mixture and a phenothiazine in an attempt to control their
pain
. The mixture was administered to patients in 3 hospital environments: 1) a palliative care unit, 2) general wards and 3) private rooms.
Pain
was measured in 92 patients with the McGill-Melzack
pain
questionnaire. The Brompton mixture controlled
pain
in 90 per cent of patients in the palliative care unit and in 75 to 80 per cent of patients in the wards or private rooms. The differences in
pain
scores between patients in the palliative care unit and the other groups were significant. The mixture produced substantial decreases in the 3 major dimensions of
pain
: 1) sensory, 2) affective and 3) evaluative. Comparison of these results with data obtained in an outpatient
pain
clinic showed that the Brompton mixture was strikingly more effective than the traditional methods of managing cancer pain.
...
PMID:The management of intractable pain in patients with advanced malignant disease. 8 29
Two patients with myelofibrosis developed fever, leg pain and periostitis. The first patient had myelofibrosis with myeloid metaplasia and was symptomatic for months before x-rays showed periosteal new bone formation in the lower extremities. He subsequently developed periostitis of both upper extremities. Radiation of the lower extremities resulted in significant
pain
relief. The second patient had a past history of polycythemia vera and experienced painful periostitis of the tibiae and fibulae. 99mTechnetium pyrophosphate bone scans showed increased uptake in the involved bones in both patients. Asymptomatic or painful periostitis may be related to the increased bone blood flow associated with myelofibrosis. Radiation can afford successful palliation in the severely symptomatic patient.
Cancer
1979 Apr
PMID:Periostitis associated with myelofibrosis. 8 52
The surviving spouses of 34 patients who died of
cancer
at St Christopher's Hospice have been interviewed about 13 months after the patient's death. The information given is compared with that obtained from 34 spouses of patients dying from
cancer
in other hospitals and matched with the St Christopher's group. Patients at St Christopher's were less often thought to have suffered severe
pain
and other distress than at other hospitals, but
pain
relief was not bought at the cost of drug-induced confusion and patients at St Christopher's remained more mobile than at other hospitals. Hospice patients were more aware of chapel services and prayers than at other hospitals. None was said to have been upset by these and 66% were glad of them. Despite the frequency of deaths in the Hospice, patients at St Christopher's were no more likely to be thought to have been 'upset' by such events than patients elsewhere or to have found their interactions with other patients anything but helpful.
...
PMID:Terminal care: evaluation of in-patient service at St Christopher's Hospice. Part I. Views of surviving spouse on effects of the service on the patient. 9 88
Fifteen patients with widespread painful osseous metastases from breast cancer unresponsive to other systemic therapy were treated with mithramycin at dose levels usually used for treating Paget's disease. Ten patients had relief of
pain
, which was marked and rapid in onset in seven. Mobility was greatly improved in four patients. Healing of bone lesions did not occur and new lesions developed while treatment was being given. Clinical response was associated with a decrease in plasma alkaline phosphatase. Toxicity was mild and consisted of nausea in most patients and a slight decrease in platelet count in one patient. Mithramycin is a useful agent for palliation of painful bone metastases and should be considered for further trials of combination chemotherapy for advanced breast cancer with bone metastases.
Cancer
Treat Rep
PMID:Effect of mithramycin on widespread painful bone metastases in cancer of the breast. 9 11
The results of this study in postoperative patients have, thus far, revealed little that was not expected from a review of the literature. Heroin hydrochloride appears to be about two to three times more potent than morphine sulfate as an analgesic, to act more promptly and to have a slightly shorter duration of action. There is a suggestion that heroin may have a somewhat different spectrum of side effects and mood effects compared to morphine, but the effects of both drugs on mood were inversely correlated with the patients' feelings at the time of drug administration. Regardless, as a group, patients responded to both drugs with significantly improved moods. A lag time between the peak intensity of analgesic and mood effects of both heroin and morphine suggest a dissociation between these effects. Whether or not these early impressions will be reinforced as this study proceeds, and whether or not the effects of the drugs in patients with chronic pain due to advanced
cancer
will be any different than in these patients with postoperative
pain
, remains to be seen.
...
PMID:Relative analgesic potency of intramuscular heroin and morphine in cancer patients with postoperative pain: a preliminary report. 12 41
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