Advanced ankle arthritis, avascular osteonecrosis, and osteomyelitis of the ankle remain a surgical challenge in the foot and ankle arena with limited treatment options. Multiple medical comorbidities contribute to total loss of the talus. Collapse of the talar body as a complication of total ankle arthroplasty, talectomy in infection, and septic talus necrosis or severe bone defects caused by tumor resection may result in need for total talar replacement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with episodes of severe vaso-occlusive pain beginning in infancy with a subset of patients with SCD transitioning to chronic pain. Response to experimental pain using quantitative sensory testing in these patients suggests altered pain processing. The objectives of this study were to characterize sensitivity to multiple modalities of experimental pain stimuli and to interrogate the relationship of psychological covariates, clinical pain burden, and pain-related outcomes to experimental pain sensitivity in children with SCD compared with healthy individuals of similar age and sex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Unintentional dural puncture (UDP) and postdural puncture headache (PDPH) occur during the course of epidural catheter placement for labor analgesia with a reported incidence of 1%-5%. After UDP with an epidural needle, 80%-86% of patients develop PDPH. Acute symptoms after UDP are well known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Persistent postmastectomy pain (PPMP) is increasingly recognized as a major individual and public health problem. Although previous studies have investigated surgical, medical, and demographic risk factors, in this study we aimed to more clearly elucidate the relationship of psychosocial factors to PPMP. Postmastectomy patients (611) were queried about pain location, severity, and burden 38.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPersistent postmastectomy pain (PPMP) is a major individual and public health problem. Increasingly, psychosocial factors such as anxiety and catastrophizing are being revealed as crucial contributors to individual differences in pain processing and outcomes. Furthermore, differences in patients' responses to standardized quantitative sensory testing (QST) may aid in the discernment of who is at risk for acute and chronic pain after surgery.
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