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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patient education should be a central component of
pain
control regimens for cancer patients. Few systematically developed and carefully evaluated
pain
control patient education programs have been reported. Patient education for
cancer pain
control should include five phases: assessment, goal setting, selection of educational strategies, implementation and reassessment. Each of these phases should be included to maximize the goals of
pain
prevention and
pain
relief.
...
PMID:The role of patient education in cancer pain control. 128 49
Efforts to understand
pain
associated with terminal illness have been guided traditionally by the biomedical model in which psychological and environmental factors are considered incidental and not causally significant influences of
pain
. More recent conceptualizations of
pain
, however, recognize that
pain
can be affected by a variety of factors including mood, beliefs about
pain
, past learning, as well as physical perturbations. This development has led to assessment strategies that are more comprehensive, multidimensional, and less singularly aligned with a biomedical model. The greatest amount of attention to
pain
among the terminally ill has focused on cancer patients. Thus, in this paper we will describe a comprehensive, multi-dimensional assessment of
cancer pain
. Information regarding cancer and
cancer pain
is first presented and then a strategy for comprehensively assessing
cancer pain
is outlined. Recent developments in the assessment of
cancer pain
are briefly reviewed.
...
PMID:Assessment of the terminally ill patient with pain: the example of cancer. 128 52
Inadequate nursing education is a major impediment to effective
pain
relief for cancer patients throughout the world. This study was conducted to identify the level of
cancer pain
knowledge among baccalaureate student nurses and to determine whether specific activities affect this level of knowledge. Two questionnaires were administered to 82 baccalaureate student nurses in the final course of their program. Although the students displayed a realistic perspective about the severity and prevalence of
cancer pain
and psychological dependence, specific knowledge deficits and negative attitudes suggest the possibility of inadequate
pain
management. Specifically, the students believed that (a) maximal analgesic therapy should be delayed until the patient's prognosis was less than 12 months; (b) the proportion of patients whose
pain
can be controlled by appropriate therapy is less than is possible; (c) increasing
pain
is related to tolerance rather than to progression of the disease; (d) the preferred route of administration is intravenous rather than oral; and (e) the degree of respiratory depression, rather than constipation, does not decrease with repeated administration. Significant positive correlations (P < or = 0.05) were found between age and
cancer pain
knowledge and between attendance at seminars/workshops and time spent reading professional journal articles. Of the 30% of the participants who perceived a particular person to be a source for obtaining information about
cancer pain
management, 52% specified a practicing registered nurse. Seminars and workshops were chosen by 59% of the students as the most effective way for nurses to increase their knowledge.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
J
Pain
Symptom Manage 1992 Nov
PMID:Level of cancer pain knowledge among baccalaureate student nurses. 128 10
Cancer pain
can be successfully managed with oral or parenteral narcotics in 80% of patients, if those factors that magnify
pain
perception are also controlled.
Pain
from any source can be made worse and
pain
tolerance impaired by depression, regression, intolerance to stress, and/or recurrent withdrawal, all of which require attention and management. Those patients whose
cancer pain
is still intractable may benefit from a procedure to interrupt
pain
pathways. Such procedures have become far less common since the introduction of chronic administration of intraspinal narcotics. The subarachnoid route is preferable to the epidural route because it is less likely to result in catheter failure and because much smaller doses can be used, with less systemic effect. In addition, tolerance can be managed more readily by readjustment of dose with the subarachnoid route, and there is no greater incidence of complications. Intraventricular narcotics can be considered in patients whose spinal canal does not allow catheter placement, at approximately 1/10th the spinal dose requirement.
...
PMID:Administration of narcotics in cancer pain. 129 25
Cancer pain
in general responds in a predictable way to analgesic drugs and drug therapy is the mainstay of treatment, successfully controlling
pain
in 70 to 90% of patients. Some pains do not respond so well but can usually be ameliorated by the judicious use of adjuvant analgesics, non-drug measures and the active involvement of the multi-disciplinary team.
...
PMID:Pain management in cancer patients. 130 42
This analysis indicated that patients with cancer-related
pain
account for 71.0% in author's material. After the TCM treatment, the effective rate were 91.6% in hepatocarcinoma-related
pain
; 86.1% in colon-rectal cancer-related
pain
; 68.2% in malignant lymphoma-related
pain
; 100% in irradiation-related
pain
of esophageal cancer, lung cancer, post-operative breast cancer. Results of "four-step analgesic ladder" showed that 52.1% of
pain
could be relieved by Step I (TCM therapy); if Step II (indomethacin) or III (phenylbutazone) was added, the rate of
pain
relief reached as high as 96.5%; and only 3.5% need to be treated by Step IV (Opioids). With less side-effects and addiction of opioids and other narcotics, the "four-step analgesic ladder" therapy seems to be more suitable for
cancer pain
relief in China.
...
PMID:[Comprehensive "4-step analgesic ladder" therapy in treating cancer-related pain-analysis of 486 cases]. 130 38
The Simple Descriptive Scale (SDS) has been known to be easier to use, but lacks sensitivity when compared to the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). In this study, 79 cancer patients quantified the intensity of their
pain
experience on both the VAS and SDS before receiving
pain
therapy and on the fifth day after commencing the therapy. High correlations were observed between the two scales in age, sex and types of analgesics. The results demonstrate that the SDS provides a simpler and, perhaps, equally sensitive alternative to the VAS, in measurement of
cancer pain
among Chinese patients. It would be particularly useful for those with language barriers and/or other factors in understanding the requirements or the VAS.
...
PMID:Comparison of two pain rating scales among Chinese cancer patients. 130 67
Few controlled clinical trials have tested the efficacy of psychological techniques for reducing
cancer pain
or post-chemotherapy nausea and emesis. In this study, 67 bone marrow transplant patients with hematological malignancies were randomly assigned to one of four groups prior to beginning transplantation conditioning: (1) hypnosis training (HYP); (2) cognitive behavioral coping skills training (CB); (3) therapist contact control (TC); or (4) treatment as usual (TAU; no treatment control). Patients completed measures of physical functioning (Sickness Impact Profile; SIP) and psychological functioning (Brief Symptom Inventory; BSI), which were used as covariates in the analyses. Biodemographic variables included gender, age and a risk variable based on diagnosis and number of remissions or relapses. Patients in the HYP, CB and TC groups met with a clinical psychologist for two pre-transplant training sessions and ten in-hospital "booster" sessions during the course of transplantation. Forty-five patients completed the study and provided all covariate data, and 80% of the time series outcome data. Analyses of the principal study variables indicated that hypnosis was effective in reducing reported oral
pain
for patients undergoing marrow transplantation. Risk, SIP, and BSI pre-transplant were found to be effective predictors of inpatient physical symptoms. Nausea, emesis and opioid use did not differ significantly between the treatment groups. The cognitive behavioral intervention, as applied in this study, was not effective in reducing the symptoms measured.
Pain
1992 Feb
PMID:Hypnosis or cognitive behavioral training for the reduction of pain and nausea during cancer treatment: a controlled clinical trial. 140 23
This prospective and comparative study was designed to determine the role of
cancer pain
and attitudes towards morphine in attenuating the intensity and duration of physical dependence following chronic morphine treatment. Morphine was administered via a stepwise ladder approach in order of oral, spinal and intravenous routes depending on the adequacy of analgesia. On-demand titration of a dose, either upward or downward, was liberal and unlimited. Withdrawal strategy was evaluated and initiated either by patients (PI group) or their families (FI group). The manifestation of physical dependence on morphine was compared between patients who successfully withdrew (total withdrawal), and patients who failed to withdraw (episodic withdrawal), from morphine for a period of more than two weeks. Eighty-eight out of 627 patients (14.1%) were excluded from our protocol; 75% of these exclusions were due to objections toward morphine as the major form of analgesic. Drop-out due to poorly tolerated side effects was relatively rare (18.2%). Fifty-four (10.0%) achieved total withdrawal and 212 (39.3%) experienced episodic withdrawal. Non-
pain
-related abstinence symptoms were highly prevalent but were tolerable for both groups.
Pain
-related symptoms were more exaggerated during episodic withdrawal. Intolerable
pain
, rather than physical dependence, contributed to the failure to withdraw from morphine. Among a total of 539, addiction was found in only one patient (0.18%) who began drug use long before entering our protocol. Attitudes towards morphine affect the acceptance of treatment and hasten the withdrawal strategy. Families were more anxious about morphine than the patients themselves which led to more aggressive, but less tolerable, withdrawal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Can cancer pain attenuate the physical dependence on chronic long-term morphine treatment? 135 30
It is commonly recognized than opioids analgesics have an major place in the treatment of
pain
. In spite of guidelines, opioids drugs remain underutilized in chronic
cancer pain
and acute severe
pain
. Among the possible factors, involved in the insufficient use of opioids drugs, is the fear (opiophoby) of physicians, nurses, patients and family to induce or to maintain an addiction. This review examines the potential of iatrogenic addiction. We will examined the place of morphine-like drugs in the treatment of severe acute pain and chronic
cancer pain
, the definition of dependency in
pain
patients, the assessment of the dependency potential in patients treated for
pain
. Available studies indicate that iatrogenic addiction is quite scarce and that the risk for a major tolerance is very small. Further studies will be necessary, since opioids analgesics may also be useful in some non-cancer chronic pain.
...
PMID:[Need of risk reevaluation in morphine dependence in pain patients]. 136 96
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