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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There is convincing evidence that acupuncture (AP) is effective for the treatment of postoperative and chemotherapy-induced nausea/vomiting, as well as postoperative dental pain. Less convincing data support AP's efficacy for chronic pain conditions, including headache, fibromyalgia and low back pain. There is no evidence that AP is effective in treating
addiction
, insomnia, obesity, asthma or stroke deficits. AP seems to be efficacious for alleviating experimental pain by increasing pain thresholds in human subjects and it appears to activate analgesic brain mechanisms through the release of neurohumoral factors, some of which can be inhibited by the opioid antagonist naloxone. In contrast to placebo
analgesia
, AP-related pain relief takes some time to develop and to resolve. Furthermore, repetitive use of AP
analgesia
can result in tolerance that demonstrates cross-tolerance with morphine. However, it appears that not all forms of AP are equally effective for providing
analgesia
. In particular, electro-AP seems to best deliver stimuli that activate powerful opioid and nonopioid analgesic mechanisms. Thus, future carefully controlled clinical trials using adequate electro-AP may be able to provide the necessary evidence for relevant
analgesia
in chronic pain conditions, such as headache, fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome and low back pain.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of acupuncture analgesia for clinical and experimental pain. 1673 14
Addicts have an exaggerated organic and psychological comorbidity and in cases of major operations or polytrauma they are classified as high-risk patients. Additional perioperative problems are a higher analgetics requirement, craving, physical and/or psychological withdrawal symptoms, hyperalgesia and tolerance. However, the clinical expression depends on the substance abused. For a better understanding of the necessary perioperative measures, it is helpful to classify the substances into central nervous system depressors (e.g. heroin, alcohol, sedatives, hypnotics), stimulants (e.g. cocaine, amphetamines, designer drugs) and other psychotropic substances (e.g. cannabis, hallucinogens, inhalants). The perioperative therapy should not be a therapy for the
addiction
, as this is senseless. On the contrary, the characteristics of this chronic disease must be accepted. Anesthesia and
analgesia
must be generously stress protective and sufficiently analgesically effective. Equally important perioperative treatment principles are stabilization of physical dependence by substitution with methadone (for heroin addicts) or benzodiazepines/clonidine (for alcohol, sedatives and hypnotics
addiction
), avoidance of stress and craving, thorough intraoperative and postoperative stress relief by using regional techniques or systematically higher than normal dosages of anesthetics and opioids, strict avoidance of inadequate dosage of analgetics, postoperative optimization of regional or systemic
analgesia
by non-opioids and coanalgetics and consideration of the complex physical and psychological characteristics and comorbidities. Even in cases of abstinence (clean) an inadequate dosage must be avoided as this, and not an adequate pain therapy sometimes even with strong opioids, can potentially activate
addiction
. A protracted abstinence syndrome after withdrawal of opioids can lead to increased response to administered opioids (e.g.
analgesia
, side-effects).
...
PMID:[Anesthesia and analgesia in addicts: basis for establishing a standard operating procedure]. 1677 29
Neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors comprise a heterogeneous class of cationic channels that is present throughout the nervous system. These channels are involved both in physiological functions (including cognition, reward, motor activity and
analgesia
) and in pathological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, some forms of epilepsy, depression, autism and schizophrenia. They are also the targets of tobacco-smoking effects and
addiction
. Neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors are pentamers of homomeric or heteromeric combinations of alpha (alpha2-alpha10) and beta (beta2-beta4) subunits, which have different pharmacological and biophysical properties and locations in the brain. The lack of subtype-specific ligands and the fact that many neuronal cells express multiple subtypes initially hampered the identification of the different native nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subtypes, but the increasing knowledge of subtype composition and roles will be of considerable interest for the development of new and clinically useful nicotinic acetylcholine receptor ligands.
...
PMID:Brain nicotinic acetylcholine receptors: native subtypes and their relevance. 1687 83
Opiate drugs, such as morphine, are renowned for their analgesic properties. To date, opioid narcotics represent the largest and most potent class of pain relievers available to treat both acute and chronic pain conditions. The use of opiates, however, is severely limited by several adverse side effects. Upon chronic use, opiates can produce tolerance, physical dependence and
addiction
. Although these conditions warrant consideration, there are acute effects that present more immediate concerns when choosing opiate narcotics for pain therapy. One of the most prevalent side effects, which continues for as long as the opiate is used for pain control, is constipation. This can impact patient compliance, as it is often one of the top reasons why patients discontinue opiate treatment. The challenge, therefore, is to develop pain therapies that preserve potent
analgesia
while preventing constipation.
...
PMID:Opioid receptor signaling: relevance for gastrointestinal therapy. 1693 60
The recent literature asserts that mistaken physician beliefs and attitudes are critical barriers to adequate cancer pain relief. To determine the prevalence of 12 proposed myths or misconceptions about morphine use in cancer pain management (CPM), we surveyed all physicians engaged in direct patient care in Duluth, Minnesota (N = 243). A 62% response was obtained. Many physicians misunderstood concepts of morphine tolerance, both to
analgesia
(51%) and to side effects (39%). Many were unaware of the use of adjuvant analgesics (29%), efficacy of oral morphine (27%), and nonexistent risk of
addiction
in CPM (20%). Analysis of result by physician age and specialy groups confirmed significant levels of misunderstanding in all subsets. Strategies to change physician attitudes and beliefs regarding morphine in CPM should focus on tolerance concepts, dosing schemes, safety, efficacy, lack of addictive risk, use of drug combinations, and the fact that cancer pain can be relieved.
...
PMID:Physician attitudes and beliefs about use of morphine for cancer pain. 1696 81
The increased use of opioids in the treatment of chronic pain encourages the search for drugs with low abuse and tolerance potential but with potent analgesic activity. Opioid agonist-antagonists and partial agonists have less abuse potential than do mu opioid receptor agonists such as morphine, and have been used for many years for their analgesic affects. Recently they have been approved for treatment of opioid
addiction
. As a guard against abuse, an opioid antagonist, such as naloxone, is added to some opioid formulations. Doctors are often hesitant to prescribe agonist-antagonists and partial agonists to opioid-tolerant patients, fearing that these drugs may precipitate withdrawal. Can drugs being used safely for
addiction
treatment also safely replace opioid agonists to provide
analgesia
in chronic pain patients who are opioid-tolerant?
...
PMID:Coadministration of an opioid agonist and antagonist for pain control. 1715 13
Deficiencies in practice, knowledge, and competence among physicians are important contributing factors to the unsatisfactory level of analgesic care in hospitalized patients. By way of a comprehensive survey, we characterized these deficiencies within an internal medicine residency program as an initial step in designing remedial educational strategies. To do so, an anonymous 43-item survey was administered to residents in an internal medicine program. A total of 61 residents (69 percent) responded. The results indicated that patient-controlled
analgesia
(PCA), a standardized pain scale, and an opioid equivalence table were underused. Competence in opioid conversion was suboptimal, but completion of an oncology rotation and familiarity with the opioid equivalence table predicted greater competence in this area (p = 0. 00 7 and p = 0.001, respectively). Self-perceptions of adequacy of training and pain-management competence were predictors of knowledge (p = 0.026 andp = 0.038, respectively). Attitudes regarding opioid
analgesia
were generally satisfactory (i.e., low "opiophobia " score), although the risk of
addiction
was still overestimated. The characterization of deficiencies in pain management in a residency program is an essential step in the design and implementation of educational interventions. Administration of a comprehensive survey is a simple and effective method of gathering this data and has the additional benefit of promoting awareness of pain management issues. Our experience served to establish, among other findings, the didactic value of experience on an oncology floor; this result substantiates the value of practical experience in the gaining of clinical competence in pain management. Interventions that capitalize on the findings of the survey and the interest in pain management generated by its administration are currently ongoing at our institution.
...
PMID:Use of a comprehensive survey as a first step in addressing clinical competence of physicians-in-training in the management of pain. 1731 54
The increasingly common practice of long-term opioid therapy for chronic noncancer pain must be guided by ongoing assessment of four types of outcomes: pain relief, function, side effects, and drug-related behaviors. Our objective was to gather initial pilot data on the clinical application of a specialized chart note, the Pain Assessment and Documentation Tool (PADT), which was developed and tested with 27 physicians. This pilot test provided the means to collect cross-sectional outcome data on a large sample of opioid-treated chronic pain patients. Each of the physician volunteers (located in a variety of settings across the United States) completed the PADT for a convenience sample of personally treated chronic pain patients who had received at least three months of opioid therapy. Completion of the PADT required a clinical interview, review of the medical chart, and direct clinical observation. Data from the PADTs were collated and analyzed. The results suggested that the majority of patients with chronic pain achieve relatively positive outcomes in the eyes of their prescribing physicians in all four relevant domains with opioid therapy.
Analgesia
was modest but meaningful, functionality was generally stabilized or improved, and side effects were tolerable. Potentially aberrant behaviors were common but viewed as an indicator of a problem (i.e.,
addiction
or diversion) in only approximately 10 percent of cases. Using the PADT physician ratings can be developed in four domains. In this sample, outcomes suggested that opioid therapy provided meaningful
analgesia
.
...
PMID:Monitoring outcomes during long-term opioid therapy for noncancer pain: results with the Pain Assessment and Documentation Tool. 1731 59
The analgesic potential of buprenorphine, a high-affinity partial mu agonist, has been a subject of study for several decades. The drug is now widely recognized as being extremely effective in relieving perioperative pain, with little of the addictive potential or risk associated with pure I agonists. Studies have suggested that buprenorphine produces adequate
analgesia
via almost any route of administration, including transdermal and subcutaneous. It has also been used, with positive results, in the treatment of opioid
addiction
, and potential remains for research into other roles, e.g., as an anti-inflammatory agent or an antihyperalgesic medication.
...
PMID:Buprenorphine: a unique opioid with broad clinical applications. 1736 94
The ability of opioids to effectively and safely control acute and cancer pain has been one of several arguments used to support extending opioid treatment to patients with chronic pain, against a backdrop of considerable caution that has been based upon fears of
addiction
. Of course, opioids may cause
addiction
, but the "principle of balance" may justify that "...efforts to address abuse should not interfere with legitimate medical practice and patient care." Yet, situations are increasingly encountered in which opioid-maintained patients are refractory to
analgesia
during periods of pain, or even during the course of chronic treatment. The real question is whether analgesic efficacy of opioids can be maintained over time. Overall, the evidence supporting long-term analgesic efficacy is weak. The putative mechanisms for failed opioid
analgesia
may be related to tolerance or opioid-induced hyperalgesia. Advances in basic sciences may help in understanding these phenomena, but the question of whether long-term opioid treatment can improve patients' function or quality of life remains a broader issue. Opioid side effects are well known, but with chronic use, most (except constipation) subside. Still, side effects can negatively affect the outcomes and continuity of therapy. This paper addresses 1) what evidence supports the long-term utility of opioids for chronic pain; 2) how side effects may alter quality of life; 3) the nature of
addiction
and why it is different in pain patients, and 4) on what grounds could pain medication be denied? These questions are discussed in light of patients' rights, and warrant balancing particular responsibilities with risks. These are framed within the Hippocratic tradition of "producing good for the patient and protecting from harm," so as to enable 1) more informed clinical decision making, and 2) progress towards right use and utility of opioid treatment for chronic pain.
...
PMID:Opioid analgesia: perspectives on right use and utility. 1752 83
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