Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0184567 (
acute pain
)
3,962
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have used transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) to treat the
acute pain
of rib fractures. The study shows that it is an effective technique, achieving higher subjective pain relief scores by patients when compared with analgesic combinations, and achieving greater increases objectively in arterial
oxygen
concentrations and peak expiratory flow rates. TENS approaches the ideal analgesic in that it is continuous in effect and the dose is patient regulated. It is recommended as an important adjunct to conventional therapy.
...
PMID:Multiple rib fractures: transcutaneous nerve stimulation versus conventional analgesia. 349 7
Many patients suffering from trauma or acute illness are in need of pain treatment in the prehospital phase, a treatment they seldom receive. In Denmark, it has been considered whether ambulance personnel should be allowed to administer pain treatment. Inhalation of 50% nitrous oxide and 50%
oxygen
has been administered for many years by non-physicians around the world. Therefore considerations concerning implementation of this treatment in Denmark are relevant. The aim of this paper was to evaluate the available knowledge about and experiences in using nitrous oxide outside the hospital for patients suffering from
acute pain
. The papers so far published are positive, but give no definite background for uncritical recommendation of prehospital pain treatment with nitrous oxide. There are no controlled studies concerning the effect of pain treatment in the prehospital phase. The few available controlled studies conducted inside the hospital have not shown significant pain-relieving effects of nitrous oxide for patients suffering from pain of acute medical of surgical origin when compared to other methods of pain treatment. Controlled studies of the effects of prehospital treatment with nitrous oxide need to be done. Technical problems and problems concerning indications, side effects, complications, pollution and possible addiction remain to be fully elucidated before prehospital treatment with nitrous oxide can be recommended for routine use in the Danish ambulances.
...
PMID:[Prehospital pain relief with nitrous oxide (Entonox)]. 798 73
We audited and analysed the adverse effects and safety of postoperative pain management on 2509 consecutive patients under care of the
Acute Pain
Service at a tertiary referral teaching hospital over a 32-month period. Our standard respiratory monitoring consisted of continuous pulse oximetry, hourly respiratory rate counting, sedation scoring and intermittent arterial blood gas sampling. This protocol was reliable and detected six episodes of bradypnoea, 13 of hypercapnia and 23 of
oxygen
desaturation occurring in 39 patients (1.8% of all spontaneously breathing patients). Two patients required naloxone injection and none had long-term sequelae. Hypotension due to epidural bupivacaine 0.0625% and fentanyl 3.3 micrograms.ml-1 infusion occurred in four patients (1.2%), all with a sensory block higher than T5. They readily responded to fluid infusion and ephedrine (two patients). Postoperative nausea or vomiting occurred in 723 (28.8%) and 380 (15.1%) patients, respectively. Odds ratio analysis showed that the risk factors for postoperative nausea and vomiting were: female gender, gynaecological operations, nongeriatric patients and systemic analgesia. Postoperative nausea and vomiting decreased analgesic efficacy by discouraging the use of patient-controlled analgesia and was regarded as equally distressing as pain. Other side-effects included: pruritus in 182 patients; dizziness in 333 and lower limb weakness in 73 (21.2% of patients receiving epidural local anaesthetics). It is concluded that a standard monitoring and management protocol, an experienced nursing team and reliable
Acute Pain
Service coverage is mandatory for the safe use of modern analgesic techniques.
...
PMID:An audit of the safety of an acute pain service. 940 64
Among the various methods of application techniques in low level laser therapy (LLLT) (HeNe 632.8 nm visible red or infrared 820-830 nm continuous wave and 904 nm pulsed emission) there are very promising "trigger points" (TPs), i.e., myofascial zones of particular sensibility and of highest projection of focal pain points, due to ischemic conditions. The effect of LLLT and the results obtained after clinical treatment of more than 200 patients (headaches and facial pain, skeletomuscular ailments, myogenic neck pain, shoulder and arm pain, epicondylitis humery, tenosynovitis, low back and radicular pain, Achilles tendinitis) to whom the "trigger points" were applied were better than we had ever expected. According to clinical parameters, it has been observed that the rigidity decreases, the mobility is restored (functional recovery), and the spontaneous or induced pain decreases or even disappears, by movement, too. LLLT improves local microcirculation and it can also improve
oxygen
supply to hypoxic cells in the TP areas and at the same time it can remove the collected waste products. The normalization of the microcirculation, obtained due to laser applications, interrupts the "circulus vitiosus" of the origin of the pain and its development (Melzak: muscular tension > pain > increased tension > increased pain, etc.). Results measured according to VAS/VRS/PTM: in
acute pain
, diminished more than 70%; in chronic pain more than 60%. Clinical effectiveness (success or failure) depends on the correctly applied energy dose--over/underdosage produces opposite, negative effects on cellular metabolism. We did not observe any negative effects on the human body and the use of analgesic drugs could be reduced or completely excluded. LLLT suggests that the laser beam can be used as monotherapy or as a supplementary treatment to other therapeutic procedures for pain treatment.
...
PMID:Low level laser therapy with trigger points technique: a clinical study on 243 patients. 945 32
We investigated the relationship between pain, intraductal and parenchymal pancreatic pressures and
oxygen
partial pressure in 39 patients who underwent surgery for chronic pancreatitis with intractable pain.
Acute pain
was correlated with parenchymal pressure; correlation between pain and
oxygen
pressure could not be found. Since no strong correlation exists between pain and parenchymal pressure, we hypothesise that pressure and parenchymal factors contribute to the pathogenesis of pain in chronic pancreatitis.
...
PMID:[Intrahepatic pressure, oxygen partial pressure and pain in chronic pancreatitis]. 957 38
Preemptive analgesia is based on administration of an analgesic before a painful stimulus generates, so as to prevent the subsequent rebound mechanism. Tissue injury results in disruption of the processing mechanisms of noxious stimuli afferent to the CNS (central nervous system) by way of an increase of inputs in the spinal cord. These reactions may be reduced by the administration of opioids. Few studies on preemptive analgesia with opioids in children are available, and none of them is concerned with pediatric neurosurgery. Tramadol and fentanyl are synthetic opioids which are relatively new and act through the activation of pain-inhibitory mechanisms. We conducted a randomized, prospective trial on the preemptive effects in children of these two analgesic drugs, administered according to three different protocols: tramadol as a bolus (1 mg/kg); tramadol by continuous infusion (150 microg/kg per h); fentanyl by continuous infusion (2 microg/kg per h). In all, 42 children undergoing major neurosurgical operations were enrolled in the study, 14 in each treatment group. Each treatment was started at the induction of general anesthesia and continued throughout the entire duration of the operation. The postoperative pain evaluation was conducted in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at the end of the surgical operations and involved comparison of any changes in behavioral (AFS scale and CHEOPS score) and hemodynamic (heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic and diastolic arterial pressure,
oxygen
saturation, O(2) and CO(2) partial pressure) parameters. Only 2 children, both in group A, needed further drug administration postoperatively. No significant side effects were noticed in any of the three groups, except that in group A there was a higher incidence of nausea and vomiting. Tramadol efficacy seems to be better when it is administered in continuous infusion; this treatment modality also leads to fewer adverse effects. Fentanyl, in contrast, proved to be superior to tramadol in the treatment of postoperative pain. In conclusion, preemptive analgesia is a valid technique for the treatment of
acute pain
in children undergoing major neurosurgical operations.
...
PMID:Preemptive analgesia with tramadol and fentanyl in pediatric neurosurgery. 1066 14
Few studies on analgesia with remifentanil (Rf) in children are available, and there are no data on the use of this drug in pediatric neurosurgery. Rf is a new mu-receptor opioid agonist, acting through the activation of pain inhibitory mechanisms. We conducted a prospective trial on the analgesic effects of Rf in 20 children less than 1 year of age undergoing a neurosurgical procedure for craniosynostosis repair. Rf was administered at doses of 0.25 microgram/kg/min, by continuous infusion, 1 h after admission to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). The treatment was prolonged for 12 h after the operation. The postoperative pain was evaluated in our PICU, comparing the changing of behavioral (AFS and CHEOPS score) and hemodynamic (heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure,
oxygen
saturation, O(2) and CO(2) partial pressure) parameters, before and after treatment with Rf. This drug showed a satisfactory pain control in all the children treated. No significant side effects were noticed, except for one episode of urinary retention. In conclusion, Rf appears to be safe and effective for the treatment of
acute pain
in the very young child submitted to craniosynostosis repair.
...
PMID:Safety and efficacy of remifentanil in craniosynostosis repair in children less than 1 year old. 1145 35
Brain responses to pain, assessed through positron emission tomography (PET) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) are reviewed. Functional activation of brain regions are thought to be reflected by increases in the regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) in PET studies, and in the blood
oxygen
level dependent (BOLD) signal in fMRI. rCBF increases to noxious stimuli are almost constantly observed in second somatic (SII) and insular regions, and in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and with slightly less consistency in the contralateral thalamus and the primary somatic area (SI). Activation of the lateral thalamus, SI, SII and insula are thought to be related to the sensory-discriminative aspects of pain processing. SI is activated in roughly half of the studies, and the probability of obtaining SI activation appears related to the total amount of body surface stimulated (spatial summation) and probably also by temporal summation and attention to the stimulus. In a number of studies, the thalamic response was bilateral, probably reflecting generalised arousal in reaction to pain. ACC does not seem to be involved in coding stimulus intensity or location but appears to participate in both the affective and attentional concomitants of pain sensation, as well as in response selection. ACC subdivisions activated by painful stimuli partially overlap those activated in orienting and target detection tasks, but are distinct from those activated in tests involving sustained attention (Stroop, etc.). In addition to ACC, increased blood flow in the posterior parietal and prefrontal cortices is thought to reflect attentional and memory networks activated by noxious stimulation. Less noted but frequent activation concerns motor-related areas such as the striatum, cerebellum and supplementary motor area, as well as regions involved in pain control such as the periaqueductal grey. In patients, chronic spontaneous pain is associated with decreased resting rCBF in contralateral thalamus, which may be reverted by analgesic procedures. Abnormal pain evoked by innocuous stimuli (allodynia) has been associated with amplification of the thalamic, insular and SII responses, concomitant to a paradoxical CBF decrease in ACC. It is argued that imaging studies of allodynia should be encouraged in order to understand central reorganisations leading to abnormal cortical pain processing. A number of brain areas activated by
acute pain
, particularly the thalamus and anterior cingulate, also show increases in rCBF during analgesic procedures. Taken together, these data suggest that hemodynamic responses to pain reflect simultaneously the sensory, cognitive and affective dimensions of pain, and that the same structure may both respond to pain and participate in pain control. The precise biochemical nature of these mechanisms remains to be investigated.
...
PMID:Functional imaging of brain responses to pain. A review and meta-analysis (2000). 1112 40
Angina, the prototypic vasoocclusive pain, is a radiating chest pain that occurs when heart muscle gets insufficient blood because of coronary artery disease. Other examples of vasoocclusive pain include the
acute pain
of heart attack and the intermittent pains that accompany sickle cell anemia and peripheral artery disease. All these conditions cause ischemia - insufficient
oxygen
delivery for local metabolic demand - and this releases lactic acid as cells switch to anaerobic metabolism. Recent discoveries demonstrate that sensory neurons innervating the heart are richly endowed with an ion channel that is opened by, and perfectly tuned for, the lactic acid released by muscle ischemia.
...
PMID:ASIC3: a lactic acid sensor for cardiac pain. 1280 43
Pain produces a physiological stress response that includes increased heart and breathing rates to facilitate the increasing demands of
oxygen
and other nutrients to vital organs. Failure to relieve pain produces a prolonged stress state, which can result in harmful multisystem effects. Good
acute pain
management is an essential part of holistic nursing care.
...
PMID:Understanding the physiological effects of unrelieved pain. 1453 21
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>