共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 109 毫秒
1.
Carlo Cattaneo Jaime Kulisevsky Viviana Tubazio Paola Castellani 《Advances in therapy》2018,35(4):515-522
Introduction
Chronic pain is an important yet overlooked non-motor symptom of Parkinson’s disease (PD), caused by an imbalance of the dopaminergic and glutamatergic systems. Safinamide has a multimodal mechanism of action, dopaminergic (reversible MAO-B inhibition) and non-dopaminergic (modulation of the abnormal glutamate release), that might be beneficial for both motor and non-motor symptoms.Objectives
To investigate the long-term (2-year) efficacy of safinamide on PD chronic pain and to confirm the positive effects observed after 6 months of treatment.Methods
This is a post hoc analysis of the data from the 2-year study 018, focused on the reduction of concomitant pain treatments and on the scores of pain-related items of the Parkinson’s disease quality of life questionnaire (PDQ-39).Results
Safinamide, compared with placebo, significantly improved the PDQ-39 items 37 (“painful cramps or spasm,” p?=?0.0074) and 39 (“unpleasantly hot or cold,” p?=?0.0209) and significantly reduced the number of concomitant pain treatments by 26.2% (p?=?0.005). A significantly greater proportion of patients in the safinamide group was not using pain drugs after 2 years of treatment (p?=?0.0478).Conclusions
The positive effects of safinamide on PD chronic pain were maintained in the long term. Further investigations are desirable to confirm their clinical relevance.Funding
Zambon SpA.2.
Aims
Create an educational program in chronic pain (EPCP).Material and methods
We used a four-step process to create the EPCP tailored to patient’s needs.Results
Five groups of patients can benefit from the program annually. Based on their own assessment, patients stated that their knowledge of chronic pain improved between 2.8 to 24%. The satisfaction with the EPCP was 8.67/10.Conclusion
Our EPCP helps patients gain and maintain the skills they need to best manage their lives with a chronic pain.3.
V. Vion-Genovese C. Maindet D. Gillet C. Boscapomi S. Heritier A. Gauchet C. Rigolet L. Benitez J.-P. Petrod J. Amiel M. Baudrant 《Douleur et Analgésie》2017,30(3):123-127
Introduction
Patients and care providers came up with the idea of an educational tool for patients with chronic painMethodology
The educational sessions were developed over a five-year period, with four meetings per year.Results
“Kit KAD” answers the problems faced by patients in pain in everyday life. The “Kit KAD” offers tools and session leaders and can be used by any team trained in PTE (patient therapeutic education).Conclusion
The “Kit KAD” group, assisted on methodology by the Eastern region UTEP (Transversal Patient therapeutic Education Unit), created an innovative educational tool for patients in chronic pain.4.
Background
The study was performed to reveal the effect of an individualized personal outpatient therapy program, based on a multidisciplinary assessment, on pain and health-related quality of life in patients with chronic pain.Methods
Fifty patients were prospectively evaluated before and 3 months after establishment of an individualized outpatient therapy program. Health-related quality of life, pain and pain-related disability, depression and motivation to adopt self-management of chronic pain were assessed. Therapy adherence was tested with a structured interview.Results
Only marginal improvements were observed in terms of pain and health-related quality of life. Therapy adherence varied between the different therapies.Conclusions
An individualized personal outpatient therapy program has only marginal effects on pain and health-related quality of life in patients with chronic pain.5.
Background
The subjective state of health with respect to pain and psyche was surveyed utilizing validated pain questionnaires in patients undergoing special pain therapy and represents the basis for targeted treatment measures.Objective
The purpose of this study was to investigate the possible distortion of answers due to social desirability of responses in chronic pain patients.Material and methods
During two survey periods assessing patient satisfaction using both anonymized and personalized questionnaires, the effects arising from socially desirable response patterns were analyzed. The sample consisted of chronic pain patients being treated in an inpatient therapy setting.Results
In both periods of observation no significant impact on the response behavior of chronic pain patients was found in personalized or anonymized questionnaires.Conclusion
The results of the study suggest that the responses of chronic pain patients with respect to their subjective state of health are not influenced by social desirability. Thus, scoring systems such as the German pain questionnaire will not be influenced by social desirability in chronic pain patients and can therefore be used as a part of diagnostics and therapy planning.6.
Background
Pain, restriction of mobility and cognitive impairment are often present in old age and intensify each other.Objectives
Is there a relationship between mobility, pain, cognitive capacity, diagnoses and number of prescribed medication for residents of nursing homes?Methods
Subgroup analysis of the baseline data from an intervention study for optimization of the medication safety of 120 nursing home residents.Results
Pain was presumed in 77.8% of the residents. Persons with cognitive impairment were more frequently affected. The results of the observational and self-reported pain assessment in cognitively impaired patients did not agree for two-thirds of the cases. A correlation between prevalence of pain, pain intensity and mobility could only be shown for persons without cognitive impairment. Half of the persons were unable to walk; 80% of the residents with analgesics as a permanent medication were more restricted in their mobility.Conclusions
Cognitive impairment is associated with pain and reduced mobility, whereby self-rated pain did not concur with the observational pain assessment for two-thirds of the residents with cognitive impairment. This illustrates the difficulty of observational pain assessment.7.
Background
The in part promising, in part discrepant efficacy of psychological treatment of chronic musculoskeletal pain indicates a demand for interdisciplinary assessment and corresponding treatment structures with differentiated degrees of psychological and syndrome-specific specialization within a multimodal orthopedic context. Acceptance of pain and psychological flexibility are strongly related to physical impairments caused by pain.Objective
Goals are improved outcomes of medical and physical treatment measures as well as their flexible implementation in daily life through a differentially indicated psychological pain therapy focusing on pain acceptance and mindfulness.Methods
This study employed the “active not doing and generating inner silence” exercise from mindful-based pain therapy (“Achtsamkeitsbasierte Schmerztherapie”, ABST).Results
Pure observation of a problem without an attempt to solve it is unusual and strange. Prerequisites for such exercises are willingness to engage as well as courage and openness.Conclusion
A differentiated indication for clinical psychological treatment or psychotherapy of pain—a highly specialized form of psychological pain therapy—should be based on the diagnostic criterium of pain acceptance.8.
Background
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is an established procedure for treatment of chronic neuropathic pain of peripheral origin. The efficacy of SCS in case of central poststroke pain (CPSP), especially thalamic pain, has not been adequately proven.Objectives
The efficacy of SCS as an extracranial neurostimulation method for the management of central pain syndrome was investigated.Materials and methods
In this study, relevant pharmacological and nonpharmacological measures for central pain management were reviewed. A case of successful SCS for thalamic pain after ischemic insult is presented. Explanatory approaches of pathophysiological processes and a review of the current literature underline our results.Results
In the case presented, SCS was found effective in the treatment of thalamic pain.Conclusion
The efficacy of SCS might be caused by segmental and supraspinal processes and collaboration of activating and inhibiting pathways. The integrity of the spinothalamic tract is mandatory. SCS is a treatment option for central pain syndrome, especially thalamic pain. Comparable studies confirm the potency of this technique. In contrast to other neuromodulation procedures spinal cord stimulation is less invasive, has a lower perioperative risk and is often less expensive. Further studies are needed to define its potential and role in the treatment of thalamic pain.9.
Background
Registries and similar data collections are a valuable addition to prospective studies as they provide data from real life treatment. In pain medicine only few such data collections exist so far.Objective
Aim of the study was to identify German-language registries or similar data collections that record patient-reported and pain-associated outcomes together with other data.Material and methods
A systematic search was carried out, which included the following sources: the data bases PubMed/MEDLINE and Embase, the German Registry for Clinical Trials (DRKS), ClinicalTrials.gov and registry portals known to us. Furthermore, an extended internet search was carried out via Google Scholar. References from personal scientific contacts and from operators of registries were also included. Questionnaires regarding registry items were sent to registry operators.Results
Out of 381 search hits, 37 potentially relevant projects received a questionnaire and 35 answered. From the 35 responders 23 registries or similar data collections fulfilling inclusion criteria could be identified: 5 primarily pain-associated, 3 therapy-associated, 2 population-associated and 13 disease-associated (rheumatism/arthritis 5, joints/spine 4, hernias 1 and cancer 3).Conclusion
The reader obtains contact information on relevant data collections associated with pain, the contents, objectives and the pain assessment instruments applied. This review could give an important impulse for increased networking in health services research on pain. A limitation of the study was that identification of registries was made difficult due to an inconsistent definition and application of the term “registry”, incomplete or insufficiently updated registry portals, missing scientific publications as well as two non-responders.10.
Background
Parental reactions to their child’s pain can comprise cognitive-affective and behavioral responses. Dysfunctional responses like parental catastrophizing may lead to an aggravation of the child’s pain.Objectives
Aims of the online-based study were (1) to psychometrically evaluate existing questionnaires into cognitive-affective (Pain Catastrophizing Scale for Parents; PCS-P) and behavioral responses (Inventar zum schmerzbezogenen Elternverhalten; ISEV-E) within a sample of 105 healthy parents, and (2) to compare their responses to existing (inter)national clinical samples and to the reactions of 80 parents with self-reported chronic pain from the general population.Methods
The assessment of parental pain-related reactions was online-based.Results
While the factor structure of the ISEV-E could not be replicated, the three factors of the PCS-P could be replicated. Parental catastrophizing of the healthy parents was lower compared to clinical samples. Healthy parents did not differ from parents with chronic pain from the general population.Conclusion
The results offer a basis to grade parental catastrophizing, so that risk-groups can be identified.11.
Background
Owing to a rise of psychosomatic comorbidities, the treatment of psychological disorders, which may negatively impact prognosis and therapy, is increasingly becoming a focus of attention for pain outpatient clinics.Aim
This study investigates and discusses the advantages of liaison psychiatric care in a university pain clinic.Methods
In this retrospective study, we investigated all patients who presented to an anaesthesiologically led pain clinic between January and June 2014. The psychiatric history was taken by the liaison psychiatrist of the pain clinic.Results
In the period investigated, 485 patients were treated as outpatients. A psychiatric diagnosis was present 351 patients (72.4%). The distribution of the diagnoses was comparable with that of a consultation service. Adaptation and affective disorders dominated. The patients were preferentially treated with new generation antidepressants.Conclusion
The constant presence of a liaison psychiatrist allows for timely, specialised care of pain patients in terms of a multimodal therapeutic approach.12.
Ala’ S Aburub B. Gagnon A. M. Rodríguez Nancy E. Mayo 《Supportive care in cancer》2016,24(9):3831-3838
Purpose
People with advanced cancer experience different sequelae which have unique effects on quality of life (QOL). The patient-generated index (PGI) is a personalized measure that allows patients to nominate, rate, and value areas that have the most impact on QOL. Fatigue, pain, and aspects of physical function are among the top 10 areas with QOL impact. An area of validation that is lacking for the PGI is the extent to which spontaneously nominated areas of QOL that patients are concerned with, agree with ratings obtained from standard patient reported outcomes (PROs).Methods
Data from 192 patients were used to compare ratings on fatigue, pain, and physical function obtained from PGI to those from standard outcome measures.Results
Within one severity rating, agreement ranged from 32.1 to 76.9 % within the fatigue domain, 34.2 to 95.24 % for pain, and between 84.2 and 94.7 % for physical function. Of the 10 items where the PGI had the highest agreement, 7 came from the RAND-36. At the domain level, people nominating an area scored in the more impaired range on standard measures than people who did not.Conclusion
PGI gives comparable information as do standard measures.Implications for cancer
PGI provides important information to guide clinical care of the patient and also produces a legitimate total score suitable for research.13.
Background
Spinal pain is common and often difficult to treat. In addition to the individual’s impairment, the economic damage is also enormous.Objective
The present work aims to provide an overview of therapeutic procedures commonly used to treat spinal pain today. These methods are employed primarily for therapy-resistant pain without an existing surgical indication.Materials and methods
The existing literature was reviewed using PubMed, Google Scholar, and orthopedic textbooks. Further references to older literature were investigated using the Google search function and the Central Library of the Medical University of Vienna.Results
In addition to X?ray-targeted infiltration, neuroablative and neuromodulatory procedures as well as adhesiolysis catheters are available. They provide consistently good results if correctly indicated.Discussion
Although in many patients, given the complexity of the pain, complete freedom from symptoms is hardly realistic, the constantly evolving minimally invasive procedures enable a clinically relevant pain reduction to be achieved. Due to the low tissue traumatization there is hardly any scar formation, and the risks of the interventions are low if correctly performed.14.
Background
In the context of improving perioperative pain management and shortening hospital stays, potent oral analgesics, such as slow release opioids, are gaining increasingly in importance.Objective
The aim of this study was to compare the use and effectiveness of different opioids in postoperative pain treatment in Germany.Materials and methods
Using data from the QUIPS database, the records of 5249 patients were evaluated. The total study population was divided into four groups: group 1 (10?mg oxycodone with or without naloxone 5?mg), group 2 (20?mg oxycodone with or without naloxone 10?mg), group 3 (piritramide) and group 4 (tramadol). Maximum pain intensity, pain-related interference with sleep and respiration, vomiting, postoperative fatigue, desire for more pain treatment and satisfaction with pain management were evaluated.Results and discussion
The differences in pain intensity were statistically significant between groups. Patients with piritramide reported more pain, more interference with sleep and respiration and more fatigue compared to those from the other groups. In the group with 10?mg oxycodone, the desire for additional pain medication was the lowest. Postoperative vomiting and satisfaction with pain management differed significantly between the four groups. Procedure-specific analysis has shown that differences between sub-groups were also significant following cholecystectomy and total knee arthroplasty.Conclusions
In summary, our findings suggest that postoperative pain treatment with slow release oral oxycodone does not show disadvantages compared to tramadol or piritramide with regard to pain-related impairments and opioid-induced side effects. This hypothesis needs to be further analyzed in controlled studies.15.
Anne-Marie H. Krebber Femke Jansen Pim Cuijpers C. René Leemans Irma M. Verdonck-de Leeuw 《Supportive care in cancer》2016,24(6):2541-2548
Purpose
The purpose of the study is to investigate screening in follow-up care to identify head and neck cancer (HNC) patients with untreated psychological distress.Methods
From November 2009 until December 2012, we investigated the use of OncoQuest (a touch screen computer system to monitor psychological distress (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)) and quality of life (HRQOL; EORTC QLQ-C30 and H&N35 module) in routine follow-up care. Patients who screened positive for psychological distress (HADS-T >14, HADS-A >7, or HADS-D >7) were asked whether they received psychological or psychiatric treatment.Results
During the study period of 37 months, OncoQuest was used by 720 individual HNC patients, of whom 714 had complete HADS data. Psychological distress was present in 206 patients (29 %). Of those patients who fulfilled in- and exclusion criteria (n?=?137), 25 received psychological treatment (18 %). Receipt of psychological treatment was significantly related to a higher score on the HADS total scale (19.6 vs. 16.9; p?=?0.019), a lower (worse) score on the EORTC QLQ-C30 scale emotional functioning (46.0 vs. 58.6; p?=?0.023), a higher (worse) score on fatigue (58.2 vs. 46.4; p?=?0.032), problems with sexuality (44.1 vs. 34.4; p?=?0.043), oral pain (43.8 vs. 28.8; p?=?0.011) and speech problems (37.0 vs. 25.3; p?=?0.042).Conclusions
Screening for psychological distress via OncoQuest is beneficial because 82 % of HNC patients identified with an increased level of distress who do not yet receive mental treatment were identified. Patients who did receive treatment reported more distress and worse quality of life, which may be explained because patients with more severe problems maybe more inclined to seek help or might be detected easier by caregivers and referred to supportive care more often.16.
Background
Children and adolescents with severe hemophilia commonly suffer from acute and chronic pain as a consequence of hemophilia-related bleeding. Intervention-related pain also plays a major role. Despite its high prevalence in this patient group, hemophilia-related pain is not always adequately addressed and sufficiently treated.Objectives
This paper discusses how to improve pain management for children and adolescents (0–18 years) with hemophilia and which specific features in this population should influence decisions in pain management.Materials and methods
An expert panel discussed challenges in pain treatment in children and adolescents with hemophilia. Recommendations are based on evidence and clinical experience.Result
Pain management in children with hemophilia needs improvement. Children with hemophilia are at risk of developing chronic pain and of suffering traumatization due to insufficient pain management. Pain therapy can be challenging in these children as both their age and the underlying disease limit the options in particular in pain medication. The expert panel developed recommendations to improve pain management in children with hemophilia.17.
Ivan Urits Abra H. Shen Mark R. Jones Omar Viswanath Alan D. Kaye 《Current pain and headache reports》2018,22(2):10
Purpose of Review
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) refers to a chronic pain condition that is characterized by progressively worsening spontaneous regional pain without dermatomal distribution. The symptomatology includes pain out of proportion in time and severity to the inciting event. The purpose of this review is to present the most current information concerning epidemiology, diagnosis, pathophysiology, and therapy for CRPS.Recent Findings
In recent years, discovery of pathophysiologic mechanisms of CRPS has led to significant strides in the understanding of the disease process.Summary
Continued elucidation of the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms will allow for the development of more targeted and effective evidence-based therapy protocols. Further large clinical trials are needed to investigate mechanisms and treatment of the disorder.18.
Background
Increased pain sensitivity is characteristic for patients with chronic pain disorder with somatic and psychological factors (F45.41). Persistent stress can induce, sustain, and intensify pain sensitivity, thereby modulating pain perception. In this context, it would be favorable to investigate which psychosocial stressors are empirically linked to pain sensitivity.Objectives
The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between psychosocial stressors and pain sensitivity in a naturalistic sample of patients with chronic pain disorder with somatic and psychological factors (F45.41).Materials and methods
We assessed 166 patients with chronic pain disorder with somatic and psychological factors (F45.41) at entry into an inpatient pain clinic. Pain sensitivity was measured with a pain provocation test (Algopeg) at the middle finger and earlobe. Stressors assessed were exposure to war experiences, adverse childhood experiences, illness-related inability to work, relationship problems, and potentially life-threatening accidents. Correlation analyses and structural equation modeling were used to examine which stressors showed the strongest prediction of pain sensitivity.Results
Patients exhibited generally heightened pain sensitivity. Both exposure to war and illness-related inability to work showed significant bivariate correlations with pain sensitivity. In addition to age, they also predicted a further increase in pain sensitivity in the structural equation model.Conclusions
Bearing in mind the limitations of this cross-sectional study, these findings may contribute to a better understanding of the link between psychosocial stressors and pain sensitivity.19.
Background
Occupational and social rehabilitation is influenced by perceived injustice as a result of injury. To assess perceived injustice, the Injustice Experience Questionnaire (IEQ) has been developed and is available in English. The aim of this study was to translate and culturally adapt the English version of the IEQ into German.Materials and methods
The IEQ was translated into German according to the criteria for the transcultural adaptation of self-assessment tools. The translation was examined in a sample of 19 pain patients as to whether the translated items were comprehensible, unacceptable or offensive, and what their meaning and the reason for the chosen response were. Data were assessed using nonparametric statistical methods.Results
The German translation of the IEQ showed a high degree of comprehensibility. The items’ meanings and participants’ selected answer options were rated as highly plausible by two raters and the wording of the items was assessed as being neither unacceptable nor offensive by participants. Because of the slightly increased values with regard to Item 3, whose meaning was unrecognized by the raters, the term “Unachtsamkeit” was replaced by “Unaufmerksamkeit.”Conclusion
The study attests to the cultural and linguistic intelligibility and precision of the German translation of the IEQ. In a follow-up study, the translation should be validated in a larger sample of pain patients.20.