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Query: UMLS:C0184567 (
acute pain
)
3,962
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute pain
can be managed favourably by the use of paracetamol, non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, opioids and local anaesthetics, solely or in combination. Sophisticated methods of administration such as nerve blocks or patient-controlled analgesia will improve results. Chronic pain, on the other hand, presents a more complex situation and the pharmacological approach is only one aspect of bio-psycho-social management programmes. The role of opioids in the treatment of chronic non-
cancer pain
has still not been clarified. Adjuvant drugs are often required.
...
PMID:[Update on the pharmacologic approach to pain]. 1021 34
The article reports a study whose purpose was to develop and test the Patient Record Pain Management Assessment Tool, an instrument to evaluate compliance with the American Pain Society's quality assurance standards on
acute pain
and
cancer pain
in chart documentation. Content validity, overall validity, and interrater reliability were all found to be acceptable. The instrument is therefore a useful tool for documenting the level of pain management practice in institutional settings.
...
PMID:The development and testing of the patient record pain management assessment tool. 1033 Jul 89
The discovery of opioid receptors and the subsequent development of the technique of epidural and intrathecal opioid administration are undoubtedly two of the most significant advances in pain management in recent decades. The use of spinal opioids is widespread and increasing. The technique is used widely to treat intraoperative, postoperative, traumatic, obstetric, chronic, and
cancer pain
. Newer developments include the increasing use of combined local anesthetics and opioids or nonopioids and also PCEA, particularly in the obstetric population. Meta-analysis of controlled trials has demonstrated improved pulmonary outcome in patients receiving epidural postoperative analgesia. Although rare, respiratory depression continues to be a major problem of the technique. None of the currently available opioids is completely safe; however, extensive international experience has shown that patients receiving spinal opioids for postoperative analgesia can be safely nursed on regular wards, provided that trained personnel and appropriate guidelines are available. The importance of a good
acute pain
service to provide the safe and effective use of spinal opioids cannot be overemphasized.
...
PMID:Epidural and spinal agents for postoperative analgesia. 1035 57
Opioids are our most powerful analgesics, but politics, prejudice, and our continuing ignorance still impede optimum prescribing. Just over 100 years ago, opium poppies were still grown on the Cambridgeshire fens in the UK to provide oblivion for the working man and his family, but the brewing lobby argued on thin evidence that their potions were less dangerous. The restriction of opioid availability to protect society and the individual continues in many countries. In this review I focus on chronic and
cancer pain
, but many of the principles apply in
acute pain
. The justification for this focus is that patients with chronic pain may suffer longer and unnecessarily if we prescribe and legislate badly.
...
PMID:Opioids in pain management. 1039 1
Clonidine is approved in the US for epidural administration in the treatment of intractable neuropathic
cancer pain
, but is also administered intrathecally for this indication and both epidurally and intrathecally in the treatment of acute, postoperative pain. The purpose of the current study was to estimate the relative potency of clonidine by epidural and intrathecal routes in the treatment of capsaicin-induced hyperalgesia and allodynia as a model of central hypersensitivity and of noxious heat as a model of
acute pain
. Twenty-four healthy volunteers were randomized to receive either intrathecal clonidine (75, 150, or 300 micrograms) or epidural clonidine (150, 300, or 600 micrograms) and rated pain from a Peltier-controlled thermode at a lumbar, thoracic, and cervical dermatomal site before and after drug administration. In addition, they rated pain from intradermal capsaicin injections at a lumbar dermatome before and 60 min after clonidine injection and described areas of hyperalgesia and allodynia to mechanical stimuli. Clonidine's effect differed with route of administration and modality of sensory testing. For acute thermal pain, intrathecal clonidine produced a dose-dependent analgesia with a lumbar>thoracic>cervical gradient, whereas only one dose of epidural clonidine reduced thermal pain and this was at the thoracic testing site. In contrast, the potency of clonidine to reduce capsaicin-induced allodynia was similar between the two routes of injection, and for hyperalgesia, clonidine was only slightly more potent after intrathecal than epidural injection. These data support clinical studies from non-comparative trials and suggest there is a >6-fold potency ratio of intrathecal:epidural administration of clonidine for
acute pain
, but a <2-fold potency ratio for these routes for mechanical hypersensitivity.
...
PMID:Relative potency of epidural to intrathecal clonidine differs between acute thermal pain and capsaicin-induced allodynia. 1060 73
Non-opioid analgesics such as NSAIDs play a central role for patients with
cancer pain
as well as for those with
acute pain
. Pain management using non-opioid analgesics need to avoid potential side effects, and the analgesic action of NSAIDs, cyclooxygenase inhibitors, would synergistically potentiate opioids' effects via the activation of the periaquaductal grey of the midbrain. The analgesic action of opioids would also be potentiated by the activation of alpha 2-adrenoceptors of the spinal cord. Thus the use of non-opioid analgesics for cancer patients taking opioid needs meticulous care. Undertreatment of pain is a persistent clinical problem for patients with cancer. Although changing medical practice is difficult and improving pain management with the rational use of combination of drugs may especially difficult, supplementation of non-opioid analgesics for opioid treatment would provide a better quality of life of cancer patients.
...
PMID:[Non-opioid analgesics in cancer pain]. 1155 55
The opioid-dependent patient presents great challenges for pain management. These challenges are not limited to potential addictive behaviors. In contrast to the profound pain relieving effects of acute opioid intake, chronic opioid intake can promote a counterintuitive state of enhanced pain sensitivity. Multiple biologic mechanisms inducing opioid tolerance and hyperalgesia have recently been elucidated. The potential hyperalgesic state accompanying opioid dependence complicates pain management somewhat for
acute pain
and
cancer pain
, but it especially does so for chronic pain. Guidelines for treatment of opioid dependence in the pain patient are proposed. Treatment oriented toward the long term requires limit setting and psychologic support that go beyond simple medication management.
...
PMID:Pain management in the opioid-dependent patient. 1170 63
Cancer patients experience pain in multiple sites and from several pathophysiologies of the symptom complex. The fluctuating nature of
cancer pain
intensity is a relevant clinical feature and depends on disease patterns and pain mechanisms. Breakthrough pain is defined as episodes of pain that "break through" the control of an otherwise effective analgesic therapy. Traditional ways of classifying pain in the cancer population include distinguishing pain associated with the treatments, the tumor, or unrelated to both and between chronic and
acute pain
. In focusing on the care of the cancer patient with pain, it is useful to be familiar with the characteristics of the typical syndrome found in association with different tumor types and anatomic locations. An understanding of the etiology of pain in relation to the cancer is useful in recognizing these complications and in treating them. This article reviews the methods presently applied to the classification of
cancer pain
and highlights the need for more research in this area.
...
PMID:Classification of cancer pain syndromes. 1178 Jul 4
Administration of opioids to alleviate moderate to severe
acute pain
and chronic
cancer pain
is an established management process. However, advancements in clinical pharmacologic research have shown that opioids are also effective in chronic noncancerous pain. Many patients properly treated for prolonged periods with opioids develop tolerance and subsequently, physical dependence. This process is not necessarily harmful to the patient and will not cause the patient to develop an addiction (properly defined as psychologic dependence). For many patients who have been on opioid therapy for months or years, analgesic effectiveness tragically becomes less. In addition, opioid-induced constipation can be severe and cause pain; patients do not develop tolerance to this adverse reaction. Therefore, such issues become a management problem and require additional intervention. Currently, many different classes of drugs can serve as effective adjuncts to opioids for treatment of pain. Adding adjunctive medication to opioid therapy improves pain management primarily by nonopioid mechanisms of action. Clinical outcomes of such combinations include greater analgesia and attenuation of opioid-induced adverse reactions such as nausea and vomiting, constipation, sedation, and respiratory depression. Adjuncts include acetaminophen, antiarrhythmics, anticonvulsants, antidepressants, antipsychotics, baclofen, benzodiazepines, capsaicin, calcium channel blockers, clonidine hydrochloride, central nervous system stimulants, corticosteroids, local anesthetics, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, pentoxifylline, and scopolamine. Some adjuncts (eg, acetaminophen) are routinely used today, whereas others (eg, nifedipine [calcium channel blocker]) are used on a limited basis but have great potential for more widespread application. All professionals (eg, nurses, pharmacists, physicians, physicians' assistants, social workers, members of the clergy) involved in treating patients with unresolved pain recognize this to be an extraordinary and delicate time. It is when patients are likely to request physicians to provide some method to accelerate their death. Thus, inadequate analgesia can become a suicidogen, ie, any factor that causes a patient to want to commit suicide. Incorporation of adjuncts to opioid therapy can serve to lessen pain and improve quality of life for a suffering patient.
...
PMID:Adjuncts to opioid therapy. 1235 36
Neural blockade has been used as the single method to anesthetize a part of the body or used in combination with general anesthesia to lessen perioperative pain. Currently, nerve blocks are used for diagnostic, prognostic, therapeutic and prophylactic proposes for management of chronic, acute and
cancer pain
in a Pain Clinic. Reviewing the records of the 3,349 patients at Siriraj Pain Clinic, we found 2,662 and 687 cases had chronic and
acute pain
problems respectively, and only 646 patients were treated with anesthetic interventions during 1990 to 1998. They consisted of 317 male and 329 female. The techniques included stellate ganglion block, paravertebral nerve block, celiac plexus block, hypogastric plexus block, mesenteric plexus block, sacral nerve block, epidural steroid, lumbar sympathectomy, first and second thoracic sympatholysis, facet joints injection, sacroiliac joint injection, intravenous regional block with guanethidine or ketanserin, continuous opioid infusion, intravenous lidocaine infusion, and a phentolamine test. The common problems of pain included brachial plexus injury, chronic spinal pain, herpetic neuralgia, ischemic pain, central post-stroke pain, and causalgia. This retrospective review showed that 38 per cent of them reported 50 per cent pain relief with temporary effect. 34 per cent experienced good and satisfactory pain relief while 9 per cent reported excellent pain relief. 17 per cent did not gain benefit from any technique of pain relief and about 2 per cent could not be evaluated due to they did not return for follow-up. One serious complication after thoracic sympatholysis was brachial plexus injury. The neural blockade is proven to be one of the useful adjunct in the management of chronic pain but the selection of the technique is subjected to its critical appraisal.
...
PMID:Anesthetic pain management in Siriraj Hospital: a retrospective review. 1245 22
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