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Annals of Agricultural and... Jun 2016Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) affects about 10-40% of women presenting to a physician, and is characterised by pain within the minor pelvis persisting for over 6 months. (Review)
Review
INTRODUCTION
Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) affects about 10-40% of women presenting to a physician, and is characterised by pain within the minor pelvis persisting for over 6 months.
MATERIALS AND METHOD
The Medline database was searched using the key words 'chronic pelvic pain' and 'pelvic congestion syndrome', published in English during the past 15 years. The condition markedly deteriorates the quality of life of the affected. Its aetiology has not been fully described and elucidated, although organic, functional and psychosomatic factors are implicated. Pain associated with parametrial varices was defined as pelvis congestion syndrome (PCS). Since the aetiology of CPP is complex, multi-directional diagnostic procedures are required.
RESULTS
The main diagnostic methods employed are imaging examinations (ultrasound, computer tomography, magnetic resonance). Advances in interventional radiology considerably contributed to the CPP treatment. Currently, embolization of parametrial vessels is one of the most effective methods to relieve pain associated with pelvic congestion syndrome.
CONCLUSIONS
Due to the complex aetiology of chronic pelvic pain, the most beneficial effects are obtained when the therapy is based on cooperation of the gynaecologist, physiotherapist, psychologist and interventional radiologist.
Topics: Chronic Pain; Humans; Pelvic Pain
PubMed: 27294622
DOI: 10.5604/12321966.1203880 -
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal... Nov 2019The poor translational record of pain research has suggested to some observers that species differences in pain biology might be to blame. In this review, I consider the... (Review)
Review
The poor translational record of pain research has suggested to some observers that species differences in pain biology might be to blame. In this review, I consider the evidence for species similarity and differences in the pain research literature. Impressive feats of translation have been demonstrated in relation to certain genetic effects, social modulation of pain and pain memory. The degree to which pain biology in rodents predicts pain biology in humans has important implications both for evolutionary accounts of pain, but also the success of analgesic drug development going forward. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Evolution of mechanisms and behaviour important for pain'.
Topics: Animals; Disease Models, Animal; Humans; Mice; Pain; Rats
PubMed: 31544615
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0286 -
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal... Nov 2019Evolutionary models of chronic pain are relatively undeveloped, but mainly concern dysregulation of an efficient acute defence, or false alarm. Here, a third... (Review)
Review
Evolutionary models of chronic pain are relatively undeveloped, but mainly concern dysregulation of an efficient acute defence, or false alarm. Here, a third possibility, mismatch with the modern environment, is examined. In ancestral human and free-living animal environments, survival needs urge a return to activity during recovery, despite pain, but modern environments allow humans and domesticated animals prolonged inactivity after injury. This review uses the research literature to compare humans and other mammals, who share pain neurophysiology, on risk factors for pain persistence, behaviours associated with pain, and responses of conspecifics to behaviours. The mammal populations studied are mainly laboratory rodents in pain research, and farm and companion animals in veterinary research, with observations of captive and free-living primates. Beyond farm animals and rodent models, there is virtually no evidence of chronic pain in other mammals. Since evidence is sparse, it is hard to conclude that it does not occur, but its apparent absence is compatible with the mismatch hypothesis. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Evolution of mechanisms and behaviour important for pain'.
Topics: Animals; Animals, Domestic; Behavior; Behavior, Animal; Humans; Mammals; Pain; Risk Factors
PubMed: 31544608
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0276 -
Trials Oct 2022Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is an established therapy that has been widely used for many decades to improve circulation in the legs. However, studies... (Randomized Controlled Trial)
Randomized Controlled Trial
The effect of an 8-week treatment program using a novel foot neuromuscular electrical stimulator on physical function, leg pain, leg symptoms, and leg blood flow in community-dwelling older adults: a randomized sham-controlled trial.
BACKGROUND
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) is an established therapy that has been widely used for many decades to improve circulation in the legs. However, studies using NMES devices in an elderly, ambulant, and otherwise apparently healthy population are lacking; this is despite the use of such devices being indicated for lower leg symptoms (such as aches, pain, and cramps) that are frequently seen in older individuals. The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of non-invasive foot NMES (administered using Revitive Medic) on such symptoms compared to a sham in a 12-week period.
METHODS
This is a single-center, single (participant)-blind, parallel-group, randomized, placebo-controlled (sham group), interventional study. Participants will be randomized to 1 of 3 groups (1:1:1) with each study group receiving a different type of foot NMES: Revitive sham; Revitive Medic Program 1; or Revitive Program 2. Each participant will be instructed to self-administer the foot NMES device for 30 min twice daily for 8 weeks. During the study, all participants will continue with their normal life, activities, medications, and diet with no restrictions. Following the 8-week NMES treatment program participants will be assessed for Canadian Occupational Performance Measure performance (COPM-P) and satisfaction (COPM-S) scores, lower leg pain, lower leg symptoms (heaviness, tiredness, aching and cramps), and blood flow volume and intensity.
DISCUSSION
Revitive foot NMES has been proven to increase blood circulation in the legs during use, which may help to relieve symptoms such as pain, heaviness, cramps, and tiredness. When NMES is applied to the plantar surface of the feet it indirectly induces contraction of the calf muscle, activating the musculo-venous pump and thus improving circulation. This study aims to provide data informing on the applicability of foot NMES for the management of leg symptoms that are likely to be indicative of poor circulation in an elderly (> 65 years) community population.
TRIAL REGISTRATION
ISRCTN10576209.
Topics: Aged; Canada; Electric Stimulation Therapy; Humans; Independent Living; Leg; Muscle Cramp; Pain
PubMed: 36242050
DOI: 10.1186/s13063-022-06828-2 -
BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health Jul 2021Various medications have been investigated for their efficacy in pain reduction during intrauterine device (IUD) insertion, but there is currently no standard... (Randomized Controlled Trial)
Randomized Controlled Trial
BACKGROUND
Various medications have been investigated for their efficacy in pain reduction during intrauterine device (IUD) insertion, but there is currently no standard recommendation. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy of 10% lidocaine spray in reducing pain during copper-containing intrauterine device (Cu-IUD) insertion.
METHODS
This study was a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Reproductive-age women were randomised at a 1:1 ratio into 10% lidocaine spray or placebo spray group. A 10 cm visual analogue scale (VAS) was used to evaluate pain during several steps of the IUD insertion procedure, and after the procedure.
RESULTS
One hundred and twenty-four women were included and 62 women were randomised in each group. Baseline characteristics between groups were similar. The 10% lidocaine spray group demonstrated significantly lower median VAS immediately after IUD insertion than the placebo group (2.95 (IQR=1.00-5.63) vs 5.00 (IQR=3.35-7.00), respectively; p=0.002). Similarly, women receiving 10% lidocaine spray reported significantly lower median VAS than those receiving placebo during tenaculum use and uterine sounding. The maximum median VAS occurred immediately after Cu-IUD insertion. The proportion of women who reported VAS≥4 during uterine sounding and after IUD placement was significantly lower in the 10% lidocaine group than in the placebo group (p<0.05). Median change in VAS from baseline to IUD placement was significantly different between 10% lidocaine spray group and placebo group (1.85 (IQR=0.08-4.03) vs 3.6 (IQR=2.40-5.80), respectively; p=0.004).
CONCLUSION
10% lidocaine spray was found to be an effective local anaesthetic method for reducing pain during insertion of Cu-IUD.
TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03870711.
Topics: Anesthetics, Local; Female; Humans; Intrauterine Devices; Lidocaine; Pain; Pain Management
PubMed: 32591417
DOI: 10.1136/bmjsrh-2020-200670 -
AJNR. American Journal of Neuroradiology Dec 2020Otalgia is very common, and when the cause of ear pain is not identified on otoscopy and physical examination, cross-sectional imaging is routinely used to evaluate for... (Review)
Review
Otalgia is very common, and when the cause of ear pain is not identified on otoscopy and physical examination, cross-sectional imaging is routinely used to evaluate for potential sources of referred ear pain (secondary otalgia). Innervation of the ear structures is complex, involving multiple upper cervical, lower cranial, and peripheral nerves, which transit and innervate a large anatomic territory involving the brain, spine, skull base, aerodigestive tract, salivary glands, paranasal sinuses, face, orbits, deep spaces of the neck, skin, and viscera. Interpreting radiologists must be familiar with these neural pathways and potential sources of secondary otalgia. The purposes of this review are to detail the currently proposed mechanisms of referred ear pain, review the salient neuroanatomy of the complex pathways responsible for secondary otalgia, highlight important benign and malignant etiologies of referred ear pain, and provide a structured search pattern for approaching these challenging cases on cross-sectional imaging.
Topics: Earache; Humans; Neuroimaging; Pain, Referred
PubMed: 33093134
DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6808 -
Acta Dermato-venereologica Jul 2020Itch and pain are important attention-demanding sensations that allow adaptive responses to potential bodily harm. An attentional bias towards itch and pain stimuli,...
Itch and pain are important attention-demanding sensations that allow adaptive responses to potential bodily harm. An attentional bias towards itch and pain stimuli, i.e. preferential attention allocation towards itch- and pain-related information, has been found in healthy, as well as patient groups. However, it remains unclear whether attentional bias for itch and pain differs from a general bias towards negative information. Therefore, this study investigated attentional bias towards itch and pain in 70 itch- and pain-free individuals. In an attention task, itch- and pain-related stimuli, as well as negative stimuli, were presented alongside neutral stimuli. The results did not indicate an attentional bias towards itch-, pain-, and negative visual information. This finding suggests that people without itch and pain symptoms do not prioritize itch- and pain-related information above neutral information. Future research should investigate whether attention towards itch- and pain-related information might be biased in patients with chronic itch and pain.
Topics: Attention; Attentional Bias; Bias; Humans; Pain; Pruritus
PubMed: 32488280
DOI: 10.2340/00015555-3537 -
Journal of Affective Disorders Oct 2016A growing body of research has explored altered physical pain threshold and tolerance in non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) and suicidal self-harm. The evidence, however,... (Review)
Review
BACKGROUND
A growing body of research has explored altered physical pain threshold and tolerance in non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) and suicidal self-harm. The evidence, however, is inconsistent such that the nature of the relationship is unclear, and whether or not this effect is also present in suicidal self-harm is equivocal.
METHODS
A keyword search of three major psychological and medical databases (PsycINFO, Medline and Web of Knowledge) was conducted, yielding 1873 records. Following duplicate removal and screening, 25 articles were quality assessed, and included in the final systematic review.
RESULTS
There is strong evidence for increased pain tolerance in NSSI, and some evidence for this in suicidal individuals, but notably, there were no prospective studies. The review found a lack of substantive focus on psychological correlates of altered pain tolerance in this population. Several candidate explanatory mechanisms were proposed within the reviewed studies.
LIMITATIONS
The current review was a narrative systematic review; methods used to assess pain were considered too heterogeneous to conduct a meta-analysis.
CONCLUSIONS
The evidence suggests that there is elevated pain tolerance among those who engage in NSSI. Future prospective research should determine if altered pain tolerance is a cause or a consequence of the behaviour. The identification of psychological correlates of increased pain tolerance is a neglected area of research. It could provide opportunities for treatment/intervention development, if mediating or moderating pathways can be identified. Too few studies have directly investigated candidate explanatory mechanisms to draw definitive conclusions.
Topics: Humans; Pain; Pain Threshold; Self-Injurious Behavior; Suicidal Ideation
PubMed: 27323296
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2016.05.068 -
The Journal of Pain Oct 2012Spontaneous pain is often discussed in the context of both chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain conditions, and it has been suggested that spontaneous pain, rather... (Review)
Review
UNLABELLED
Spontaneous pain is often discussed in the context of both chronic inflammatory and neuropathic pain conditions, and it has been suggested that spontaneous pain, rather than stimulus-evoked pain, may be the more significant clinical problem. The following issues are discussed here. First, it is suggested that the concept of spontaneous pain makes no sense when the pain is the result of an ongoing inflammatory reaction. Evidence is reviewed that indicates that spontaneous pain is present in patients with neuropathic pain, but perhaps only in a subset of such patients. Second, it is suggested that in the presence of allodynia and hyperalgesia, stimulation from the activities of daily life occurs very many times a day and that these stimulus-evoked pains may summate to give a fluctuating level of daily pain that both patients and investigators mistake for spontaneous pain.
PERSPECTIVE
Which is more important-stimulus-evoked pain or spontaneous pain? This review suggests that to answer the question we will need to distinguish neuropathic spontaneous pain from inflammatory ongoing pain and to differentiate both from summated allodynic and hyperalgesic pains caused by the stimuli of daily life.
Topics: Humans; Pain; Pain Measurement; Physical Stimulation
PubMed: 22824584
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2012.05.008 -
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal... Nov 2019Enormous progress in understanding the mechanisms that mediate pain can be augmented by an evolutionary medicine perspective on how the capacity for pain gives selective... (Review)
Review
Enormous progress in understanding the mechanisms that mediate pain can be augmented by an evolutionary medicine perspective on how the capacity for pain gives selective advantages, the trade-offs that shaped the mechanisms, and evolutionary explanations for the system's vulnerability to excessive and chronic pain. Syndromes of deficient pain document tragically the utility of pain to motivate escape from and avoidance of situations causing tissue damage. Much apparently excessive pain is actually normal because the cost of more pain is often vastly less than the cost of too little pain (the smoke detector principle). Vulnerability to pathological pain may be explained in part because natural selection has shaped mechanisms that respond adaptively to repeated tissue damage by decreasing the pain threshold and increasing pain salience. The other half of an evolutionary approach describes the phylogeny of pain mechanisms; the apparent independence of different kinds of pain is of special interest. Painful mental states such as anxiety, guilt and low mood may have evolved from physical pain precursors. Preliminary evidence for this is found in anatomic and genetic data. Such insights from evolutionary medicine may help in understanding vulnerability to chronic pain. This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Evolution of mechanisms and behaviour important for pain'.
Topics: Biological Evolution; Humans; Pain
PubMed: 31544605
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0288