Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Drug challenge test (DCT) is performed to evaluate chronic pain pharmacologically and determine its medical treatment. One test drug is administered in one day for DCT and characterization of the test drug. Four patients developed side effects of the test drugs for DCT in whom other drug tests were postponed or canceled. A 58-year-old man with multiple arthritis of rheumatic arthritis and fibromyalgia had headache, nausea, and vomiting all day after ketamine test. A 76-year-old man with chronic general pain and failed back surgery syndrome had vomiting and abdominal discomfort two hours after morphine test and had redness and itching on his bilateral forearms the following day. A 78-year-old man with chronic lumbar and right lower limb pain due to L 4-5 lumbar disc herniation and postherpetic neuralgia felt dizzy, fell down and bruised on his lower back and left knee twelve hours after morphine test. A 32-year-old woman with chronic pelvic pain had skin eruption on her thigh the day after phentolamine test. Although the amount of the test drug in DCT is small and its half-life is short, long-term side effects might occur. We should decrease the amounts or frequencies of ketamine and morphine, and administer them taking long intervals before other tests.
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PMID:[Postponed or canceled drug challenge tests and side effects of the test drug--a report of four cases]. 1649 93

Caudal block with a local anesthetic through the hiatus sacralis has been performed in patients with chronic low back pain, lower limb pain, anal pain, and pelvic pain due to spinal canal stenosis, lumbar disc herniation, lumbar spondylolisthesis, postherpetic neuralgia, peripheral vascular disease, complex regional pain syndrome and so on. We prepar- ed an information and consent sheet on caudal block in The University of Tokyo Hospital. In the information sheet, we included disease, purpose, methods, outcome, accidental complications of caudal block, other treatments, progress on unperformed case, questions and answers, influence of rejection, and doctor's name. We experienced some cases of boring pain, deterioration of low back pain and lower limb pain, headache, nausea, hypertension, hypotension, and tachycardia as accidental complications of caudal block. In describing some accidental complications, we included boring pain, high intracranial pressure, dural puncture, nerve injury, infection, hemorrhage, embolism, allergy, and heart, lung, brain, liver, and kidney failures. Further, we could refer to the accidental complications of epidural block. However, the rate of each accidental complication has not been known in detail. We should survey the outcome and accidental complication of caudal block prospectively in multiple facilities and provide the patients with useful information.
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PMID:[Information and consent sheet of caudal block in the University of Tokyo Hospital]. 1678 90

Central cord pain is very difficult to relieve, even with the many kinds of medical and surgical treatments available. Following spinal cord infarctions, central cord pain can develop. The problems that may arise could include limb pain, pelvic pain, difficulties voiding, and difficulties defecating. We are reporting a case of central cord pain caused by a spinal cord infarction of the conus medullaris. Limb pain was reduced by spinal cord stimulation. Voiding and defecation difficulties and pelvic pain were reduced by sacral nerve stimulation. Thus, in a case involving both intractable limb and pelvic pain, a combination therapy of these two stimulations might be an effective treatment modality.
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PMID:Sacral nerve and spinal cord stimulation for intractable neuropathic pain caused by spinal cord infarction. 2215 Aug 97