23 results match your criteria: "Emergency Medicine and Multidisciplinary Pain Center[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Long-term conventional spinal cord stimulation (LT-SCS) is effective for treating painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (PDPN) initially, but its effectiveness may decline over time.
  • *In a rat study, LT-SCS led to increased thresholds for mechanical hypersensitivity and changes in nerve fiber density, indicating structural adaptations in response to pain.
  • *The study suggests that LT-SCS reduces certain proteins associated with pain pathways, revealing potential mechanisms for its effectiveness in managing PDPN symptoms.*
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Introduction: Refractory pain is a major clinical problem in patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and chronic pancreatitis (CP). New, effective therapies to reduce pain are urgently needed. Intravenous lidocaine is used in clinical practice in patients with PDAC and CP, but its efficacy has not been studied prospectively.

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Corticosteroids for radicular pain: Systemic or epidural?

Interv Pain Med

December 2023

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg, Genk, Lanaken, Belgium.

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Introduction: Cervicogenic headache (CEH) and occipital neuralgia (ON) are headaches originating in the occiput and that radiate to the vertex. Because of the intimate relationship between structures based in the occiput and those in the upper cervical region, there is significant overlap between the presentation of CEH and ON. Diagnosis starts with a headache history to assess for diagnostic criteria formulated by the International Headache Society.

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9. Chronic knee pain.

Pain Pract

January 2025

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine and Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Genk, Belgium.

Introduction: Chronic knee pain is defined as pain that persists or recurs over 3 months. The most common is degenerative osteoarthritis (OA). This review represents a comprehensive description of the pathology, diagnosis, and treatment of OA of the knee.

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Introduction: Persistent Spinal Pain Syndrome (PSPS) refers to chronic axial pain and/or extremity pain. Two subtypes have been defined: PSPS-type 1 is chronic pain without previous spinal surgery and PSPS-type 2 is chronic pain, persisting after spine surgery, and is formerly known as Failed Back Surgery Syndrome (FBSS) or post-laminectomy syndrome. The etiology of PSPS-type 2 can be gleaned using elements from the patient history, physical examination, and additional medical imaging.

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Background: Despite the routine use of radiofrequency (RF) for the treatment of chronic pain in the lumbosacral and cervical region, there remains uncertainty on the most appropriate patient selection criteria. This study aimed to develop appropriateness criteria for RF in relation to relevant patient characteristics, considering RF ablation (RFA) for the treatment of chronic axial pain and pulsed RF (PRF) for the treatment of chronic radicular pain.

Methods: The RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method (RUAM) was used to explore the opinions of a multidisciplinary European panel on the appropriateness of RFA and PRF for a variety of clinical scenarios.

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Background: Radiofrequency (RF) treatment of the genicular nerves reduces chronic knee pain in patients with osteoarthritis (OA) or persistent postsurgical pain (PPSP) after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The objective of this study is to compare long-term outcomes of cooled and conventional RF and perform an economic evaluation.

Methods: The COCOGEN trial is a double-blinded, non-inferiority, pilot, randomized controlled trial that compared the effects up to 12 months of cooled and conventional RF in patients with chronic knee pain suffering from OA or PPSP after TKA following a 1:1 randomization rate.

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5. Sacroiliac joint pain.

Pain Pract

April 2024

Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Rijnstate Ziekenhuis, Velp, The Netherlands.

Introduction: Sacroiliac (SI) joint pain is defined as pain localized in the anatomical region of the SI joint. The reported prevalence of SI joint pain among patients with mechanical low back pain varies between 15% and 30%.

Methods: In this narrative review, the literature on the diagnosis and treatment of SI joint pain was updated and summarized.

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1. Lumbosacral radicular pain.

Pain Pract

March 2024

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg, Genk/Lanaken, Belgium.

Introduction: Patients suffering lumbosacral radicular pain report radiating pain in one or more lumbar or sacral dermatomes. In the general population, low back pain with leg pain extending below the knee has an annual prevalence that varies from 9.9% to 25%.

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4. Painful diabetic polyneuropathy.

Pain Pract

February 2024

Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Introduction: Pain as a symptom of diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN) significantly lowers quality of life, increases mortality and is the main reason for patients with diabetes to seek medical attention. The number of people suffering from painful diabetic polyneuropathy (PDPN) has increased significantly over the past decades.

Methods: The literature on the diagnosis and treatment of diabetic polyneuropathy was retrieved and summarized.

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Introduction: The prevalence of chronic knee pain is increasing. Osteoarthritis (OA) and persistent postsurgical pain (PPSP) are two important causes of knee pain. Chronic knee pain is primarily treated with medications, physiotherapy, life-style changes and intra-articular infiltrations.

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Targeted intrathecal drug delivery (TIDD) has the objective of bringing the drug(s) close to the receptors influencing pain modulation, and thus reducing the dose and the side effects. Intrathecal drug delivery knew its real start with the development of permanent implantation of intrathecal and epidural catheters, combined with internal or external ports, reservoirs, and programmable pumps. TIDD is a valuable treatment for patients with cancer suffering refractory pain.

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2. Cervical radicular pain.

Pain Pract

September 2023

Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Multidisciplinary Pain Center, Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg, Belgium.

Introduction: Cervical radicular pain is pain perceived in the upper limb, caused by irritation or compression of a cervical spine nerve, the roots of the nerve, or both.

Methods: The literature on the diagnosis and treatment of cervical radicular pain was retrieved and summarized.

Results: The diagnosis is made by combining elements from the patient's history, physical examination, and supplementary tests.

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Background: Radiofrequency (RF) treatment of the genicular nerves has the potential to reduce chronic knee pain due to osteoarthritis or persistent postsurgical pain, however, a direct comparison between the two main modalities used, conventional and cooled, is lacking.

Methods: This double blind, non-inferiority, pilot, randomized controlled trial compared the effects of cooled and conventional RF in chronic knee pain patients suffering from osteoarthritis or persistent postsurgical pain after total knee arthroplasty. Patients were randomized following a 1:1 rate.

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Background: Radiofrequency (RF) treatment of the genicular nerves offers pain relief in patients suffering from chronic knee pain including persistent post-surgical knee pain (PPSP). We present the first case report of the development of complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) in a chronic knee pain patient after an RF ablation of the genicular nerves that was successfully treated with dorsal root ganglion (DRG) stimulation.

Case Presentation: The patient developed increased pain, sympathetic and dysmorphic changes of the index knee 10 weeks after RF treatment for PPSP.

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Introduction: Cervical epidural corticosteroid injections are frequently used for the treatment of subacute cervicobrachial pain. This therapy is considered safe, with the vast majority of the complications being minor and transient.

Case Report: We present a case of a woman in her fifties who suffered from cervicobrachialgia and received 2 cervical epidural corticosteroid infiltrations.

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