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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe the results obtained with an alternative method of treatment for spastic painful hip dislocations in nonambulatory patients, which consists of a proximal femoral resection with capsular interposition arthroplasty, and the addition of a hinged external fixator for postoperative articulated hip distraction to allow for an immediate upright position and the ability to
sit
in a wheelchair. We performed this technique in three patients (four hips) with a mean age at the time of surgery of 15 years. Postoperatively, clinical improvement was observed in all four hips, with respect to
pain
relief, sitting tolerance, perineal care and functional range of motion.
...
PMID:Proximal femoral resection and articulated hip distraction with an external fixator for the treatment of painful spastic hip dislocations in pediatric patients with spastic quadriplegia. 1804 74
Nondisplaced proximal humerus fracture may be associated with soft tissue injury. This case report examines 2 cases of superior labral anterior-posterior (SLAP) tears in association with nondisplaced fractures of the proximal humerus. In the first case, the patient fell from a jet
ski
, causing a traction injury to his arm. A greater tuberosity fracture was identified. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) did not reveal a definitive labral tear. After conservative management had failed, a type IV SLAP tear and a small rotator cuff tear were arthroscopically identified and repaired. In the second case, a power company lineman fell from a lift and attempted to hold on with his dominant arm. A nondisplaced greater tuberosity and a surgical neck fracture were discovered. MR arthrography revealed no evidence of SLAP tear. Four months after injury, a type II SLAP tear was arthroscopically identified and repaired. In these 2 cases, the presence of the fracture likely slowed operative intervention because
pain
was attributed to the fracture itself, and not to the SLAP tear. If patients do not follow the usual course of improvement after a proximal humerus fracture from a superior traction mechanism, consideration should be given to associated superior labral tears that may require surgical intervention.
...
PMID:SLAP tear associated with a minimally displaced proximal humerus fracture. 1806 88
Non-specific low back pain (NSLBP) is commonly conceptualised and managed as being inflammatory and/or mechanical in nature. This study was designed to identify common symptoms or signs that may allow discrimination between inflammatory low back pain (ILBP) and mechanical low back pain (MLBP). Experienced health professionals from five professions were surveyed using a questionnaire listing 27 signs/symptoms. Of 129 surveyed, 105 responded (81%). Morning
pain
on waking demonstrated high levels of agreement as an indicator of ILBP.
Pain
when lifting demonstrated high levels of agreement as an indicator of MLBP. Constant
pain
,
pain
that wakes, and stiffness after resting were generally considered as moderate indicators of ILBP, while intermittent
pain
during the day,
pain
that develops later in the day,
pain
on standing for a while, with lifting, bending forward a little, on trunk flexion or extension, doing a
sit
up, when driving long distances, getting out of a chair, and
pain
on repetitive bending, running, coughing or sneezing were all generally considered as moderate indicators of MLBP. This study identified two groups of factors that were generally considered as indicators of ILBP or MLBP. However, none of these factors were thought to strongly discriminate between ILBP and MLBP.
...
PMID:Mechanical or inflammatory low back pain. What are the potential signs and symptoms? 1855 28
In Washington v. Glucksberg, the Court declined to find a right to physician-assisted suicide ("PAS") in the Constitution. Not a single Justice dissented. One would expect such a ruling to be quite secure. But Lawrence v. Texas, holding that a state cannot make consensual homosexual conduct a crime, is not easy to reconcile with Glucksberg. Lawrence certainly takes a much more expansive view of substantive due process than did Glucksberg. It is conceivable that the five Justices who made up the Lawrence majority--all of whom still
sit
on the Court--might overrule Glucksberg. For various reasons, however, this seems improbable. Unlike the situation with respect to the pre-Lawrence era, Glucksberg does not stigmatize any politically vulnerable group. When there is no democratic defect in the political process, there is much to be said for courts deferring to reasonable legislative judgments. Moreover, unlike the developments preceding Lawrence, there has been no emerging awareness of a right or liberty to enlist the assistance of a physician in committing suicide. No state supreme court has found a right to PAS in its own state constitution. Nor, in the decade since Glucksberg, has any state legislature legalized PAS. And attempts have been made to do so in some twenty states. In addition, various considerations might cause a court to balk at constitutionalizing PAS for the terminally ill. Such a right is not easily cabined. If personal autonomy extends to the time and manner of one's death, why doesn't it also apply whenever a competent person believes that death is better than continued life? Once the right to PAS is grounded on self-determination or personal autonomy in controlling ones own life and death, it no longer seems plausible to limit it to the terminally ill. Why should people who have to endure
pain
, suffering, or indignity for a much longer time than the terminally ill (often defined as those with six months or less to live) be denied this right? The argument made by many proponents of PAS that the right to forgo medical treatment and the right to PAS are merely subcategories of the same broad right is not convincing. Most of the two million people who die every year in this country do so in hospitals and long-term care institutions and do so after a decision to forgo life-sustaining treatment has been made. If medical treatment could not be rejected, vast numbers of patients would be at the mercy of every technological advance. (For example, Nancy Cruzan could have been kept alive in her persistent vegetative state for thirty years.) Allowing a patient to die at some point is a practical condition upon the successful operation of medicine. The same can hardly be said of PAS.
...
PMID:Foreword: can Glucksberg survive Lawrence? Another look at the end of life and personal autonomy. 1917 42
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is being undertaken in a younger population than before and as a result the functional demands on the knee are likely to be increasing. As a consequence, it is important to define quantitative functional knee tests that can monitor any increase. A valuable functional knee test has to be able to distinguish small differences (selectivity) and has to be independent of
pain
(content validity). In this study, patient-based questionnaires (WOMAC and Knee Society score) and performance-based tests (
sit
-to-stand movement, maximal isometric contraction and timed-up-and-go) were used to assess which of these tests are selective and valid to measure knee function. Tests were considered to be selective if they could discriminate between knee patients and healthy control subjects, and to have functional content validity if they were relatively independent of
pain
. Twenty-eight patients were measured 16 months after surgery and compared to a healthy control group of 31 subjects. The
sit
-to-stand movement and timed-up-and-go test were both selective and functionally content valid. The timed-up-and-go test can be used for a quick initial assessment of global function and the
sit
-to-stand movement as a more biomechanical instrument identifying how the knee function of the patient is affected.
...
PMID:How to quantify knee function after total knee arthroplasty? 1862 Aug 63
It is beyond the scope of this article to review the advantages of VATS lobectomy, but the data in support of this technique are increasing progressively. There is excellent evidence to support the oncologic equivalence and safety profile as compared with open thoracotomy, and data that demonstrate the reduced
pain
associated with VATS resection. Also, reduction in immune disturbance provides a tantalizing glimpse of one additional potential modality of benefit for less traumatic surgery. Unfortunately, in the economic world, equivalence, preferably with less cost, is the test applied. Whatever the societal benefit of improved quality of life following surgery, this has no cost benefit attached. From the foregoing discussion one can conclude that VATS lobectomy is no more costly than open resection and does generate additional hospital beds. The authors remain uncertain as to the preferred form of VATS lobectomy but it seems that the reduced trauma of the endoscopic procedure is associated with more benefit in terms of shorter hospitalization albeit at the cost of some increase in operating time. VATS techniques and lobectomy
sit
comfortably within the structure of any thoracic unit requiring little adjustment to established process. It is likely that ultimately 30% or thereabouts of major pulmonary resection will be undertaken using this technique and that VATS interventions will aid patient assessment regardless of stage or ultimate intended therapy. Competency and responsible use remain paramount considerations.
...
PMID:The VATS lobectomist: analysis of costs and alterations in the traditional surgical working pattern in the modern surgical unit. 1883 4
We evaluated the clinical outcomes, in terms of early weight bearing, of using opening wedge high tibial osteotomy (OWHTO) to treat spontaneous osteonecrosis of the medial femoral condyle of the knee (SONK) using TomoFix and artificial bone substitute. Damaged cartilage tissue was removed and drilling of the necrotic area followed by OWHTO was performed in 30 knees from 30 patients with an average age of 71 years (range 58-82) at the time of operation. Patients were allowed to undertake partial weight-bearing exercises 1 week after the osteotomy procedure, with all patients performing full weight-bearing exercise at 2 weeks post-surgery. The mean follow-up period was 40 months (range 24-62). All of the SONK patients could walk with a full weight-bearing load, using only a T-cane, at 2 weeks after undergoing OWHTO. Clinical assays, including the mean American Knee Society Score and Function Score, showed significant improvements from 51 to 93 points, and 58 to 93 points, respectively. Prior to surgery, the average femoro-tibial angle (FTA) during standing was 181 (1 degree anatomical varus) and had significantly changed to 170 (10 degrees valgus) at the time of follow-up. There were no cases of non-union, or implant failure in any of our patients. In addition, none of the patients could
sit
in the Japanese style prior to surgery, but 21 of 30 patients (70%) could do so after treatment. Arthroscopic findings could be observed in 24 out of 30 cases at implant removal. Necrotic area in each case was covered with fibrous cartilage-like tissue completely. Drilling of the necrotic area followed by OWHTO with TomoFix and artificial bone substitute is an effective treatment for SONK as it results in
pain
alleviation and regeneration of the fibrous cartilage tissue over the necrotic legion. In addition, an early weight-bearing exercise program is possible after this procedure and full weight-bearing can be achieved at two weeks after surgery.
...
PMID:Clinical results and radiographical evaluation of opening wedge high tibial osteotomy for spontaneous osteonecrosis of the knee. 1916 68
In Washington v. Glucksberg, the Court declined to find a right to physician-assisted suicide ("PAS") in the Constitution. Not a single Justice dissented. One would expect such a ruling to be quite secure. But Lawrence v. Texas, holding that a state cannot make consensual homosexual conduct a crime, is not easy to reconcile with Glucksberg. Lawrence certainly takes a much more expansive view of substantive due process than did Glucksberg. It is conceivable that the five Justices who made up the Lawrence majority--all of whom still
sit
on the Court--might overrule Glucksberg. For various reasons, however, this seems improbable. Unlike the situation with respect to the pre-Lawrence era, Glucksberg does not stigmatize any politically vulnerable group. When there is no democratic defect in the political process, there is much to be said for courts deferring to reasonable legislative judgments. Moreover, unlike the developments preceding Lawrence, there has been no emerging awareness of a right or liberty to enlist the assistance of a physician in committing suicide. No state supreme court has found a right to PAS in its own state constitution. Nor, in the decade since Glucksberg, has any state legislature legalized PAS. And attempts have been made to do so in some twenty states. In addition, various considerations might cause a court to balk at constitutionalizing PAS for the terminally ill. Such a right is not easily cabined. If personal autonomy extends to the time and manner of one's death, why doesn't it also apply whenever a competent person believes that death is better than continued life? Once the right to PAS is grounded on self-determination or personal autonomy in controlling one's own life and death, it no longer seems plausible to limit it to the terminally ill. Why should people who have to endure
pain
, suffering, or indignity for a much longer time than the terminally ill (often defined as those with six months or less to live) be denied this right? The argument made by many proponents of PAS that the right to forgo medical treatment and the right to PAS are merely subcategories of the same broad right is not convincing. Most of the two million people who die every year in this country do so in hospitals and long-term care institutions and do so after a decision to forgo life-sustaining treatment has been made. If medical treatment could not be rejected, vast numbers of patients would be at the mercy of every technological advance. (For example, Nancy Cruzan could have been kept alive in her persistent vegetative state for thirty years.) Allowing a patient to die at some point is a practical condition upon the successful operation of medicine. The same can hardly be said of PAS.
...
PMID:Can Glucksberg survive Lawrence? Another look at the end of life and personal automony. 1859 10
A 46-year-old patient sustained a dia-infracondylar tibial fracture after a
ski
accident. Open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) was carried out. After an initially uneventful postoperative course the patient was readmitted because of local and systemic infection signs. Radical surgical debridement was carried out following by Vacuum-Assisted Closure (VAC) therapy. The resulting defect consisted of bone defect of the tibia tuberosity, and complete loss of the patellar tendon and the overlying soft tissue. Reconstruction was carried out with a combined tensor fascia lata (TFL) flap including the TFL muscle with the ilio-tibial tract, vascularized part of the iliac crest and the overlying soft tissue. Bone healing took place without signs of osteomyelitis recurrence, and full weight bearing was possible 4 months after reconstruction. Successful reconstruction of the patellar tendon using the ilio-tibial tract, enables the patient full active knee joint motion. The soft tissue coverage shows stable conditions. The donor site showed inconspicuous healing without
pain
and normal range of motion of the hip joint. So this composite TFL flap is an interesting flap not only for defects following trauma, but also for combined defects following extensive infections after knee implants.
...
PMID:Bone, tendon, and soft tissue reconstruction in one stage with the composite tensor fascia lata flap. 1946 Dec 82
Pudendal neuralgia (PN) involves severe, sharp
pain
along the course of the pudendal nerve, often aggravated with sitting. Current therapies include medication management, nerve blocks, decompression surgery, and neuromodulation. The ideal management for PN has not been determined. We present a case of a female with 1.5 years of sharp, burning
pain
of the left gluteal and perineal regions. She could not
sit
for longer than 10 to 15 minutes. Sacroiliac joint, epidural, and piriformis injections did not improve her
pain
. She had tried physical therapy, occupational therapy, massage, and acupuncture but the
pain
persisted. Medication treatment with oxycodone-acetaminophen, extended release morphine sulfate, amitriptyline, and gabapentin provided only minor relief and she had failed other multianalgesic therapy. She had been unable to work at her desk job for over a year. She had a positive response to 2 diagnostic pudendal nerve blocks with lidocaine that provided
pain
relief for several hours. This patient elected to undergo pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) of the left pudendal nerve in hopes of achieving a longer duration and improved
pain
relief. PRF was carried out at a frequency of 2 Hz and a pulse width of 20 milliseconds for a duration of 120 seconds at 42 degrees Celsius. After the procedure she reported tolerating sitting for 4 to 5 hours. Her multianalgesic therapy was successfully weaned. At 5 months follow-up she felt motivated to return to work. One and a half years after the procedure the patient is only taking oxycodone-acetaminophen for
pain
relief and still has good sitting tolerance. There were no procedure-related complications. To our knowledge PRF for the treatment of PN has not been reported elsewhere in the literature. PRF is a relatively new procedure and is felt to be safer than continuous radiofrequency. Current literature suggests that PRF delivers an electromagnetic field, which modifies neuro-cellular function with minimal cellular destruction. We conclude that PRF of the pudendal nerve offers promise as a potential treatment of PN that is refractory to conservative therapy.
Pain
Physician
PMID:Successful treatment of refractory pudendal neuralgia with pulsed radiofrequency. 1946 29
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