Publications by authors named "Uwe Kern"

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of tapentadol prolonged release (PR) for severe, chronic low back pain with a neuropathic component in a subpopulation that achieved adequate pain relief with tapentadol PR 300 mg/day in a randomized, double-blind, phase 3b study.

Methods: Patients with painDETECT "unclear" or "positive" ratings and pain intensity ≥ 6 (11-point NRS-3 [average 3-day pain intensity]) were titrated to tapentadol PR 300 mg/day over 3 weeks. A subpopulation with pain intensity < 4 continued receiving tapentadol PR 300 mg/day during an 8-week, open-label continuation arm.

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Objectives: Effective treatment of phantom limb pain (PLP, pain felt in the part of the body of an amputated limb) is still difficult to achieve, and improved treatment is needed. It is therefore of paramount interest to understand the current practice of PLP therapy outside pain centers.

Design: As a part of a nationwide survey, 537 amputees were asked 11 questions related to their treatment experiences and the pain relief.

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Objective: Deep and slow breathing (DSB) techniques, as a component of various relaxation techniques, have been reported as complementary approaches in the treatment of chronic pain syndromes, but the relevance of relaxation for alleviating pain during a breathing intervention was not evaluated so far.

Methods: In order to disentangle the effects of relaxation and respiration, we investigated two different DSB techniques at the same respiration rates and depths on pain perception, autonomic activity, and mood in 16 healthy subjects. In the attentive DSB intervention, subjects were asked to breathe guided by a respiratory feedback task requiring a high degree of concentration and constant attention.

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Objective: Botulinum toxin type A is established in the treatment of hyperhidrosis. This pilot study was designed to prove the alleviating effect of botulinum toxin type B (BTX-B) in sweating of the residual limb, as BTX-B, even in low doses, is supposed to possess a more specific action in sympathetic nerves than botulinum toxin type A does at a wider radius of diffusion.

Design: Nine lower limb amputees received 1750 U BTX-B injected at the site of maximum sweating.

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The treatment of phantom pain is frequently dissatisfying. We wanted to find out whether an electromagnetically shielding stump stocking interwoven with metal (medipro(R)Liner RELAX [medi Bayreuth, Bayreuth, Germany]) could have a positive effect on phantom pain. A double-blind, randomized, crossover trial in a total of 30 leg amputees compared the experimental (=verum) silicon liner (VL) fitted to the amputation stump with a dummy (=placebo) liner (PL).

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Four post-amputation patients (1 with phantom pain, 3 with stump pain) were each treated with 100 IU botulinum toxin A, divided between several trigger points in the distal stump musculature. In 1 female patient (along with a pronounced reduction in phantom pain) hyperhidrosis of the stump ceased completely, probably after diffusion of the drug into the dermal sweat glands, leading to longer and safer use of the prosthesis. Intentional intradermal injection for this issue therefore could be valuable.

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Patients who had previously undergone amputation of the arm (n = 2) or leg (n = 2) were treated with botulinum toxin type B injections at several trigger points of their stump musculature. We administered a total dose of 2500 IU of botulinum toxin type B (Neurobloc, Elan Pharma, Munich, Germany) to the arm amputation stumps, 5000 IU for one amputation of the lower leg, and 2500 IU to the other lower leg amputation of a patient with a very low baseline body weight. Two patients reported that the injection was very painful.

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