1.Response to pain by different gestational age neonates.
Chuanxiong, XIA ; Lei, YANG ; Ping, ZHAO ; Xiaoming, ZHANG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2002;22(1):84-6
One hundred infants were divided into the following 3 gestational age (GA) groups: (I) premature infants (n = 30) with the gestational age between 29 and 32 weeks; (II) premature infants (n = 30) with the gestational age between 33 and 36 weeks; (III) full-term infants (n = 40). The recorded responses of all infants to pain included the behavioral responses to painful stimuli (cry, facial activity and limbs movement) and the variety of heart rate. The results indicated that the infants of 3 groups had different degree response to various painful stimuli. Pain expression in full term infants was more significant than premature infants to same stimuli. 33-weeks GA infants were differential from 29-weeks GA infants. Full term infants showed more vertical mouth stretch and more taut tongue and more hand to mouth than premature infants, but more horizontal mouth stretch in premature infants.
Gestational Age
;
Infant, Newborn/*physiology
;
Pain/*physiopathology
;
Pain Measurement/*methods
2.The Effects of Informational Intervention on Postoperative Pain following Tonsillectomy in Children.
Korean Journal of Child Health Nursing 2002;8(4):400-413
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of informational intervention on postoperative pain following tonsillectomy in children. This study was performed on 30 children, aged 5-15 years, undergoing tonsillectomy and their parents by providing informational intervention with colored figure; operation procedure and information. Pain assessment was done by Pain Questionnaire. The results from this study were as follows : 1. Children in experimental group with mean 16.07 had lower pain scores than control group with mean 14.87 at 4th hours after operation(p < 0.05). It showed "significant difference" and first hypothesis was adopted. 2. Children in experimental group with mean 20.60 had lower pain scores than control group with mean 17.27 at 8th hours after operation(p < 0.05). It showed "significant difference" and second hypothesis was adopted. 3. Children in experimental group with mean 28.80 had lower pain scores than control group with mean 25.70 at 24th hours after operation(p < 0.05). It showed "significant difference" and third hypothesis was adopted. 4. When we analyzed the time difference and difference between two groups simultaneously by repeated measure ANOVA, the significant difference was not found. And so "the experiential group with operation-related information will show the lower pain sense than the control group just as the time flows after operation", fourth hypothesis was rejected. Generally, it was found that providing information about operation to children and their parents reduced effectively postoperative pain in children, but in clinical settings there are minimum preoperative information-providing because of insufficient time and inconvenience although nursing staffs and patients know its needs. Conclusionally providing preoperative information should help children and their parents cope with Pre, Peri and Post operative events effectively.
Adenoidectomy
;
Analysis of Variance
;
Child*
;
Humans
;
Methods
;
Nursing Staff
;
Pain Measurement
;
Pain, Postoperative*
;
Parents
;
Tonsillectomy*
;
Child Health
3.Mechanisms and applications of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation in analgesia.
Zheng-Yu TANG ; Hui-Quan WANG ; Xiao-Lei XIA ; Yi TANG ; Wei-Wei PENG ; Li HU
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2017;69(3):325-334
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), as a non-pharmacological and non-invasive analgesic therapy with low-cost, has been widely used to relieve pain in various clinical applications, by delivering current pulses to the skin area to activate the peripheral nerve fibers. Nevertheless, analgesia induced by TENS varied in the clinical practice, which could be caused by the fact that TENS with different stimulus parameters has different biological mechanisms in relieving pain. Therefore, to advance our understanding of TENS in various basic and clinical studies, we discussed (1) neurophysiological and biochemical mechanisms of TENS-induced analgesia; (2) relevant factors that may influence analgesic effects of TENS from the perspectives of stimulus parameters, including stimulated position, pulse parameters (current intensity, frequency, and pulse width), stimulus duration and used times in each day; and (3) applications of TENS in relieving clinical pain, including post-operative pain, chronic low back pain and labor pain. Finally, we propose that TENS may involve multiple and complex psychological neurophysiological mechanisms, and suggest that different analgesic effects of TENS with different stimulus parameters should be taken into consideration in clinical applications. In addition, to optimize analgesic effect, we recommend that individual-based TENS stimulation parameters should be designed by considering individual differences among patients, e.g., adaptively adjusting the stimulation parameters based on the dynamic ratings of patients' pain.
Analgesia
;
methods
;
Humans
;
Pain Management
;
Pain Measurement
;
Skin
;
Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation
4.Advances in the research of effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety in burn patients.
Chinese Journal of Burns 2015;31(3):183-185
Pain and anxiety engender major psychic problems during all phases of treatment for burn patients. Analgesic alone does not allay these problems satisfactorily in these patients. Music therapy, as an important complementary and alternative therapy, has been widely used in multiple medical fields. However, its positive effect on alleviation of pain and anxiety in burn patients is undefined. The objective of this review is to summarize the feasibility, application fields, methods, and the effectiveness of music therapy in allaying pain and anxiety of burn patients during the whole course of treatment.
Anxiety
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therapy
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Burns
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Humans
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Music
;
psychology
;
Music Therapy
;
methods
;
Pain
;
prevention & control
;
Pain Measurement
5.Response to pain by different gestational age neonates.
Chuanxiong XIA ; Lei YANG ; Ping ZHAO ; Xiaoming ZHANG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2002;22(1):84-86
One hundred infants were divided into the following 3 gestational age (GA) groups: (I) premature infants (n = 30) with the gestational age between 29 and 32 weeks; (II) premature infants (n = 30) with the gestational age between 33 and 36 weeks; (III) full-term infants (n = 40). The recorded responses of all infants to pain included the behavioral responses to painful stimuli (cry, facial activity and limbs movement) and the variety of heart rate. The results indicated that the infants of 3 groups had different degree response to various painful stimuli. Pain expression in full term infants was more significant than premature infants to same stimuli. 33-weeks GA infants were differential from 29-weeks GA infants. Full term infants showed more vertical mouth stretch and more taut tongue and more hand to mouth than premature infants, but more horizontal mouth stretch in premature infants.
Gestational Age
;
Humans
;
Infant, Newborn
;
physiology
;
Pain
;
physiopathology
;
Pain Measurement
;
methods
6.Discussion of correlativity between acupoints and Goldenberg's tender points.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2007;27(12):911-913
OBJECTIVETo study clinically on acupoints by probing the correlativity between Goldenberg's tender points in the patient of fibromyalgia syndrome and acupoints.
METHODSLocal hyaluronidase injection and other methods were adopted.
RESULTSThe tender points were increased by more than 50 groups according to the standard of Goldenberg's tender points. The Goldenberg's tender points and acupoints both have tender character, radiating pain character by palpation, local cord and lump fibrous harden change.
CONCLUSIONBoth the Goldenberg's tender point and the acupoint are inflammatory reactive points of the body diseases with diagnosis and treatment significance. Most of the parts in relatively healthy people are at bone joints where myofasciae adhere with rich nerves and vessels distribution and good reactivity to internal and external circumstances.
Acupuncture Points ; Fibromyalgia ; diagnosis ; physiopathology ; Humans ; Pain Measurement ; methods ; Pain Threshold ; Severity of Illness Index
7.Million Visual Analogue Scale Questionnaire: Validation of the Persian Version
Hesam AKBARI ; Mohammad GHASEMI ; Taha YEGANI ; Mohammad Gholami FESHARAKI ; Maryam SARAEI ; Yalda BARSAM ; Hamed AKBARI
Asian Spine Journal 2019;13(2):242-247
STUDY DESIGN: Descriptive cross-sectional study. PURPOSE: To validate the Persian version of the Million Visual Analogue Scale Questionnaire (MVAS), a self-administered low back pain (LBP) questionnaire. OVERVIEW OF LITERATURE: The majority of LBP questionnaires translated into Persian evaluate the impact of LBP on daily living. The MVAS is one of the most commonly used self-administered LBP questionnaires, and was developed to assess a different direction and effect of activities of daily living on LBP intensity. METHODS: The questionnaire was translated into Persian with the forward-backward method and was administered to 150 patients randomly sampled from an occupational medicine clinic in Tehran in 2017. RESULTS: Cronbach's alpha for all subscales ranged between 0.670 and 0.799. Confirmatory factor analysis showed adequate construct validity of the Persian version of the MVAS, with root mean square error of approximation 0.046, goodness of fit index 0.902, and comparative fit index 0.969. Other indexes were satisfactory. CONCLUSIONS: The Persian MVAS is a valid and reliable instrument that can assess the effect of various daily activities on the intensity of LBP.
Activities of Daily Living
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Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Humans
;
Low Back Pain
;
Methods
;
Occupational Medicine
;
Pain Measurement
8.The good pain management (GPM) ward program in China and its impact on Chinese cancer patients: the SYSUCC experience.
Yun-Peng YANG ; Yu-Xiang MA ; Yan HUANG ; Yuan-Yuan ZHAO ; Fei XU ; Ying TIAN ; Ben-Yan ZOU ; Rui-Zhen GAO ; Li ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Cancer 2014;33(7):323-329
To improve cancer pain management, the Medical Oncology Department of Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center (SYSUCC) launched the Good Pain Management (GPM) Ward Program, which has been recognized by the Chinese Ministry of Health and promoted throughout the nation. This retrospective case-control study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of the program. Patients diagnosed with malignant solid tumors with bone metastasis were eligible. Patients who were admitted 6 months before the initiation of the GPM program were used as the control group, and patients admitted 6 months after the initiation of the program were used as the GPM group. The pain-reporting rate and pain management index (PMI) were calculated. The pain levels before and after pain management were compared. A total of 475 patients (244 in the control group and 231 in the GPM group) were analyzed. The pain-reporting rate of the GPM group was significantly higher than that of the control group (62.8% vs. 37.7%, P < 0.001). The PMI of the GPM group was significantly higher than that of the control group (0.083 vs. -0.261, P < 0.001). Therefore, the GPM Ward Program improved the pain management of cancer patients and provided experience for improving cancer pain management in the future.
Aged
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Bone Neoplasms
;
Case-Control Studies
;
China
;
Humans
;
Medical Oncology
;
Neoplasms
;
Pain
;
Pain Management
;
methods
;
Pain Measurement
;
Retrospective Studies
9.Nurses' Assessment of Postoperative Pain: Can it be an Alternative to Patients' Self-Reports?.
Ik Soo CHUNG ; Woo Seok SIM ; Gaab Soo KIM ; Sang Hyun PARK ; Ye Soo PARK ; Kyung Jun CHA ; Young Sun PARK ; Young Jin LIM ; Sang Chul LEE ; Yong Chul KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2001;16(6):784-788
This study was designed to evaluate whether the nurses' assessment of postoperative pain can be an alternative to patients' self-reporting. We examined 187 patients receiving postoperative intravenous patient-controlled analgesia. The nurses assessed the patients' pain with three pain indices (therapeutic efficacy, pain intensity, and facial pain expression) 8 hr after operation. The patients recorded their resting and movement pain using 100-mm visual analog scales immediately following the nurses' assessment. There was an acceptable correlation between overall pain measurement assessed by patients and that assessed by nurses (canonical correlation coefficient=0.72, p=0.0001). The resting pain was more reliably reflected than the movement pain in overall measurement assessed both by nurses and by patients. Among the three pain indices assessed by nurses, the pain intensity most reliably reflected the patients' self-reports. The pain intensity assessed with a simple verbal descriptor scale therefore is believed to be an effective alternative to the patients' self-reports of postoperative pain at rest. However, it mirrored the patients' self-reports during movement less reliably. Therapeutic efficacy and facial pain expression indices were not effective alternatives to patients' self-reporting.
Analgesia, Patient-Controlled
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Facial Expression
;
Human
;
Nursing Assessment/*methods/standards
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Pain Measurement
;
Pain, Postoperative/*nursing
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Perioperative Nursing/*methods
;
Reproducibility of Results
10.Neuroimaging and artificial intelligence for assessment of chronic painful temporomandibular disorders-a comprehensive review.
International Journal of Oral Science 2023;15(1):58-58
Chronic Painful Temporomandibular Disorders (TMD) are challenging to diagnose and manage due to their complexity and lack of understanding of brain mechanism. In the past few decades' neural mechanisms of pain regulation and perception have been clarified by neuroimaging research. Advances in the neuroimaging have bridged the gap between brain activity and the subjective experience of pain. Neuroimaging has also made strides toward separating the neural mechanisms underlying the chronic painful TMD. Recently, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is transforming various sectors by automating tasks that previously required humans' intelligence to complete. AI has started to contribute to the recognition, assessment, and understanding of painful TMD. The application of AI and neuroimaging in understanding the pathophysiology and diagnosis of chronic painful TMD are still in its early stages. The objective of the present review is to identify the contemporary neuroimaging approaches such as structural, functional, and molecular techniques that have been used to investigate the brain of chronic painful TMD individuals. Furthermore, this review guides practitioners on relevant aspects of AI and how AI and neuroimaging methods can revolutionize our understanding on the mechanisms of painful TMD and aid in both diagnosis and management to enhance patient outcomes.
Humans
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Facial Pain/diagnostic imaging*
;
Artificial Intelligence
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Temporomandibular Joint Disorders/diagnostic imaging*
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Neuroimaging/methods*
;
Pain Measurement/methods*