Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Increasing optimism protects against pain-induced impairments in task shifting performance
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Monday, December 26, 2016
Evidenced-Based Guidelines on the Treatment of Fibromyalgia Patients- Are They Consistent and If Not, Why Not? Have effective psychological treatments been overlooked?
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Friday, December 23, 2016
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
The Effect of Substance P on an Intervertebral Disc Rat Organ Culture Model
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Propionibacterium acnes, Coagulase-Negative Staphylococcus, and the “Biofilm-like” Intervertebral Disc
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540° Cervical Realignment Procedure for Extensive Cervical OPLL With Kyphotic Deformity
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Can C3 Laminectomy Reduce Interlaminar Bony Fusion and Preserve the Range of Motion After Cervical Laminoplasty?
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Clinical and Radiological Study Focused on Relief of Low Back Pain After Decompression Surgery in Selected Patients With Lumbar Spinal Stenosis Associated With Grade I Degenerative Spondylolisthesis
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Results of Revision Surgery for Proximal Junctional Kyphosis Following Posterior Segmental Instrumentation: Minimum 2-Year Postrevision Follow-Up
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A Systematic Review of Cross-cultural Adaptation of the Oswestry Disability Index
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Lumbar Spine Paraspinal Muscle and Intervertebral Disc Height Changes in Astronauts After Long-Duration Spaceflight on the International Space Station
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Surgical Resection of Intradural Extramedullary Spinal Tumors: Patient Reported Outcomes and Minimum Clinically Important Difference
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Monday, December 19, 2016
The effectiveness of treatments for patients with medication overuse headache; a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Sunday, December 18, 2016
Saturday, December 17, 2016
Higher Prescription Opioid Dose is associated with Worse Patient-Reported Pain Outcomes and More Health Care Utilization
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Causal Mediation in the Development of Painful Temporomandibular Disorder
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Friday, December 16, 2016
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Role of transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 receptors in rodent models of meningeal nociception – Experiments in vitro
Abstract
Background
The TRP channel ankyrin type 1 (TRPA1) is a nonselective cation channel known to be activated by environmental irritants, cold and endogenous mediators of inflammation. Activation of TRPA1 in trigeminal afferents innervating meningeal structures has recently been suggested to be involved in the generation of headaches.
Methods
Two in vitro models of meningeal nociception were employed using the hemisected rodent head preparation, (1) recording of single meningeal afferents and (2) release of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) from the cranial dura mater. The role of TRPA1 was examined using the TRPA1 agonists acrolein and mustard oil (MO). BCTC, an inhibitor of TRP vanilloid type 1 receptor channels (TRPV1), and the TRPA1 inhibitor HC030031 as well as mice with genetically deleted TRPA1 and TRPV1 proteins, were used to differentiate between effects.
Results
Acrolein did not cause discharge activity in meningeal Aδ- or C-fibres but increased the electrical activation threshold. Acrolein was also effective in releasing CGRP from the dura of TRPV1−/− but not of TRPA1−/− mice. MO increased the discharge activity of afferent fibres from rat as well as C57 wild-type and TRPA1−/− but not TRPV1−/− mice. The effect was higher in C57 compared to TRPA1−/− mice.
Conclusion
Sole TRPA1 receptor channel activation releases CGRP and increases the activation threshold of meningeal afferents but does not generate propagated activity, and so would be capable of causing local effects like vasodilatation but not pain generation. In contrast, combined TRPA1 and TRPV1 activation may be rather pronociceptive supporting headache generation.
Significance
Sole activation of TRPA1 receptor channels increases the activation threshold but does not cause propagated action potentials in meningeal afferents. TRPA1 agonists cause CGRP release from rodent dura mater. Peripheral TRPA1 receptors may have a pronociceptive function in trigeminal nociception only in combination with TRPV1.
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Biological mechanism of post-herpetic neuralgia: Evidence from multiple patho-psychophysiological measures
Abstract
Background
Post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN), which develops after the resolution of a herpes zoster eruption, is an exceptionally drug-resistant neuropathic pain. The unsatisfactory management of PHN partly results from the difficulty in dissecting out its contributing factors due to the complexity of PHN mechanism.
Methods
Here, to elaborate our understanding of the PHN mechanism and to establish a basis for effective therapeutic strategies, we comprehensively investigated the contributions of multiple factors to PHN severity.
Results
Based on the comparison of somatosensory detection thresholds (C, Aδ and Aβ fibre thresholds) between affected and unaffected sides, 16 PHN patients with significant sensory deficits and 13 PHN patients without significant sensory deficits were identified and assigned to different groups. The different extents of lesions in the nociceptive system between patients with and without sensory deficits were confirmed using laser-evoked brain responses. Moreover, patients with sensory deficits had more severe pain and psychological disorders, e.g. anxiety and depression. Importantly, chronic pain severity was significantly influenced by various psychophysiological factors (sleep disturbances, psychological disorders and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis dysfunction) for patients with sensory deficits.
Conclusions
Our findings demonstrated the contribution of multiple patho-psychophysiological factors to PHN severity, which could help establish a basis for the development of a rational, patient-centred therapeutic strategy.
Significance
This study revealed the contribution of multiple patho-psychophysiological factors to PHN severity, which expanded our understanding of the underlying PHN mechanism, and helped develop a rational, patient-centred therapeutic strategy targeting towards the corresponding etiology and psychophysiological disorders for individual patient.
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Mechanical pinprick pain in patients with unilateral spatial neglect: The influence of space representation on the perception of nociceptive stimuli
Abstract
Background
Crossing the hands over the midline can reduce the perceived intensity of nociceptive stimuli applied onto the hands. It remains unclear to what extent intact representation of peripersonal space influences this effect. Here we used the crossed-hands paradigm in patients with unilateral spatial neglect, a neuropsychological condition characterized by the inability to detect, attend and respond to contralesional (most often left) stimuli, and spared ability to process stimuli in the non-affected space.
Methods
Sixteen post-stroke patients without unilateral neglect and 11 patients with unilateral spatial neglect received punctate mechanical pinprick stimuli onto their crossed or uncrossed hands. We tested: (i) whether deficits in space representation reduce the possibility of observing ‘crossed-hands analgesia’, and; (ii) whether placing the contralesional hand, normally lying in the affected space in the healthy space would increase the number of detected stimuli.
Results
Our results showed that neglect patients did not exhibit ‘crossed-hands’ analgesia, but did not provide strong evidence for an improvement in the number of detected stimuli when the contralesional hand was in the healthy space.
Conclusion
These findings uphold the notion that the perception of nociceptive stimuli is modulated by the relative position of the hands in space, but raise questions about the conditions under which these effects may arise.
Significance
We show that deficits in space representation can influence the processing of mechanical pinprick stimuli. Our results raise several questions on the mechanisms underlying these effects, which are relevant for the clinical practice.
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Preoperative sleep quality predicts postoperative pain after planned caesarean delivery
Abstract
Background
Severe post-caesarean pain remains an important issue associated with persistent pain and postpartum depression. Women's sleep quality prior to caesarean delivery and its influence on postoperative pain and analgesic intake have not been evaluated yet.
Methods
Women undergoing caesarean delivery with spinal anaesthesia (bupivacaine 12 mg, fentanyl 20 μg, morphine 100 μg) were evaluated preoperatively for sleep quality using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) questionnaire (PSQI 0–5 indicating good sleep quality, PSQI 6–21 poor sleep quality). Peak and average postoperative pain scores at rest, movement and uterine cramping were evaluated during 24 h using a verbal numerical pain score (VNPS; 0 indicating no pain and 100 indicating worst pain imaginable), and analgesic intake was recorded. Primary outcome was peak pain upon movement during the first 24 h.
Results
Seventy-eight of 245 women reported good sleep quality (31.2%; average PSQI 3.5 ± 1.2) and 167 poor sleep quality (68.2%; average PSQI 16.0 ± 3.4; p < 0.001). Women with poor sleep quality had significantly higher peak pain scores upon movement (46.7 ± 28.8 vs. 36.2 ± 25.6, respectively; p = 0.006). With multivariable logistic regression analysis, poor sleep quality significantly increased the risk for severe peak pain upon movement (VNPS ≥70; OR 2.64; 95% CI 1.2–6.0; p = 0.02).
Discussion
A significant proportion of women scheduled for caesarean delivery were identified preoperatively as having poor sleep quality, which was associated with more severe pain and increased analgesic intake after delivery. The PSQI score may therefore be a useful tool to predict increased risk for acute post-caesarean pain and higher analgesic requirements, and help tailor anaesthetic management.
Significance
Multiple studies have evaluated predictors for severe acute pain after caesarean delivery that may be performed in a clinical setting, however, sleep quality prior to delivery has not been included in predictive models for post-caesarean pain. The PSQI questionnaire, a simple test to administer preoperatively, identified that up to 70% of women report poor sleep quality before delivery, and poor sleep quality was associated with increased post-caesarean pain scores and analgesic intake, indicating that PSQI could help identify preoperatively women at risk for severe pain after caesarean delivery.
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Development of a repository of individual participant data from randomized controlled trials of therapists delivered interventions for low back pain
Abstract
Background
Individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis of existing randomized controlled trials (RCTs) is a promising approach to achieving sufficient statistical power to identify sub-groups. We created a repository of IPD from multiple low back pain (LBP) RCTs to facilitate a study of treatment moderators. Due to sparse heterogeneous data, the repository needed to be robust and flexible to accommodate millions of data points prior to any subsequent analysis.
Methods
We systematically identified RCTs of therapist delivered intervention for inclusion to the repository. Some were obtained through project publicity. We requested both individual items and aggregate scores of all baseline characteristics and outcomes for all available time points. The repository is made up of a hybrid database: entity-attribute-value and relational database which is capable of storing sparse heterogeneous datasets. We developed a bespoke software program to extract, transform and upload the shared data.
Results
There were 20 datasets with more than 3 million data points from 9328 participants. All trials collected covariates and outcomes data at baseline and follow-ups. The bespoke standardized repository is flexible to accommodate millions of data points without compromising data integrity. Data are easily retrieved for analysis using standard statistical programs.
Conclusions
The bespoke hybrid repository is complex to implement and to query but its flexibility in supporting datasets with varying sets of responses and outcomes with different data types is a worthy trade off. The large standardized LBP dataset is also an important resource useable by other LBP researchers.
Significance
A flexible adaptive database for pain studies that can easily be expanded for future researchers to map, transform and upload their data in a safe and secure environment. The data are standardized and harmonized which will facilitate future requests from other researchers for secondary analyses.
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Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Spinal D-serine increases PKC-dependent GluN1 phosphorylation contributing to the sigma-1 receptor-induced development of mechanical allodynia in a mouse model of neuropathic pain
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Monday, December 12, 2016
A trial based economic evaluation comparing spinal cord stimulation with best medical treatment in painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy
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Friday, December 9, 2016
Diagnosis and Treatment of C4 Radiculopathy
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Clinical Outcome of Cervical Laminoplasty and Postoperative Radiological Change for Cervical Myelopathy With Degenerative Spondylolisthesis
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Braces for Idiopathic Scoliosis in Adolescents
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New Minimally Invasive Technique for Direct Pars Interarticularis Osteosynthesis Using Cortical Screws and Spinous-Process Modular Link
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Thursday, December 8, 2016
[World Report] Doctors lobby for better chronic pain management
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Wednesday, December 7, 2016
What it feels like to be an interesting teaching opportunity
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An adolescent with disabling abdominal pain
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Assessment of shoulder pain for non-specialists
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Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Monday, December 5, 2016
Shared decision making in patients with low risk chest pain: prospective randomized pragmatic trial
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