Unlabelled: Teaching about chronic pain in psychosomatics courses - an overview of the situation in Germany and the Tübingen Model Objectives: When dealing with chronic pain patients it is crucial to take a bio-psycho-social approach. However, it is unclear how this approach is currently being taught to medical students, and how they judge its role and importance.
Methods: We carried out a qualitative study (questionnaire) asking (1) German psychosomatic departments about pain-related teaching and (2) medical undergraduates about pain-relevant issues.
Results: Bio-psycho-social facts are well represented within psychosomatics courses but only theoretically tested. There is still much room for improvement through cross-linking with other disciplines. In Tübingen, "psychosocial factors" and the "empathic doctor-patient relationship" play a significantly higher role when teaching psychosomatic courses than somatic ones. There were no significant differences regarding the role of an "integrative recording of medical history" or how the importance of any of the three topics was rated.
Conclusions: Chronic pain is well represented in psychosomatic courses in Germany, though exams could be more practical. The establishment of interdisciplinary approaches beyond the teaching of core psychosomatic content could be expanded and especially used more frequently when adapting curricula to competence-based standards.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.13109/zptm.2018.64.2.198 | DOI Listing |
Neurol Sci
January 2025
International Ph.D. Program in Medicine, College of Medicine, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, 110, Taiwan.
Objectives: Fibromyalgia imposes a considerable burden of disability worldwide, and its therapies include rehabilitation interventions. However, the overall brain modulatory effects of rehabilitation interventions and their effects on clinical improvements in patients with fibromyalgia remain unclear. This systematic review of magnetic resonance imaging studies synthesised evidence for the brain modulatory effects of rehabilitation in patients with fibromyalgia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic fracture-related infection is a complex, costly clinical problem with a wide spectrum of clinical presentations. The goals of treatment are infection control with a healed fracture covered by well-vascularized soft tissue and improvement of patient pain and function. Management is both medical, with culture-targeted antimicrobial agents, and surgical, requiring meticulous irrigation and débridement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFracture-related infection (FRI) is a serious complication that occurs primarily in surgically treated fractures. FRIs occur when bacteria enter the site of bony injury and alter the healing inflammatory response within the bone. This can prevent bone regeneration and can lead to long-lasting complications such as chronic infection, pain, nonunion, and amputation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA A Pract
January 2025
From the Department of Pain Management, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.
Intercostal neuralgia can be debilitating and extremely difficult to treat despite multi-modal therapies. The literature describing the role of neuromodulation in patients with intercostal neuralgia is scarce. In this medically challenging case report, we describe a 56-year-old male with a near complete resolution of intractable chronic intercostal neuralgia, secondary to traumatic rib fractures and multiple surgical interventions, with a single lead thoracic spinal cord stimulator (SCS) implant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Orthop Relat Res
December 2024
Federal University of Bahia, Salvador, Brazil.
Background: Several meta-analyses have evaluated the use of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) in the treatment of Achilles tendinopathy. Although they generally did not find PRP to be effective, an updated meta-analysis containing all the available, high-quality randomized trial evidence that addresses the methodological shortcomings identified in earlier meta-analyses needs to be performed.
Question/purposes: This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to evaluate the efficacy of PRP in improving (1) pain and function as assessed using the Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment-Achilles (VISA-A) score 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year after treatment and (2) VAS pain scores 3 months after treatment in patients with chronic Achilles tendinopathy.
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