Publications by authors named "William Isenberg"

Peer comparison feedback is a promising strategy for reducing opioid prescribing and opioid-related harms. Such comparisons may be particularly impactful among underestimating clinicians who do not perceive themselves as high prescribers relative to their peers. But peer comparisons could also unintentionally increase prescribing among overestimating clinicians who do not perceive themselves as lower prescribers than peers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An initial opioid prescription with a greater number of pills is associated with a greater risk for future long-term opioid use, yet few interventions have reliably influenced individual clinicians' prescribing. Our objective was to evaluate the effect of feedback interventions for clinicians in reducing opioid prescribing. The interventions included feedback on a clinician's outlier prescribing (individual audit feedback), peer comparison, and both interventions combined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bradykinin-induced mechanical hyperalgesia is sympathetically dependent and B(2)-type bradykinin receptor-mediated in the rat; however, a sympathetically independent component of bradykinin hyperalgesia is shown after subdiaphragmatic vagotomy. We evaluated the mechanism of this bradykinin-induced sympathetic-independent mechanical hyperalgesia. The dose-response curve for bradykinin mechanical hyperalgesia in sympathectomized plus vagotomized rats was similar in magnitude to that for sympathetically dependent bradykinin hyperalgesia in normal rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subdiaphragmatic vagotomy produces a decrease in mechanical nociceptive threshold that is greater in male rats and an enhancement of bradykinin hyperalgesia that is greater in female rats. To examine the role of gonadal hormones in these sex differences, we evaluated the effect of gonadectomy, with or without gonadal hormone replacement, on vagal modulation of nociceptive threshold and bradykinin hyperalgesia by using the Randall-Selitto paw withdrawal test. Gonadectomy (before sexual maturation) plus vagotomy decreased nociceptive threshold in male rats more than either lesion alone, whereas neither lesion nor in combination had an effect on nociceptive threshold in female rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF