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Full-Text Articles in Medical Sciences

Multimodal Medicine: Pain Control Potential, Tyler Ostlund Jan 2022

Multimodal Medicine: Pain Control Potential, Tyler Ostlund

Master of Science in Nursing Family Nurse Practitioner

Due to the continual problem with overuse of, overdose on, and abuse of opioid medications for the past three decades it is paramount that effective, cheap, and above all safe forms of pain control are studied and applied. Multimodal pain management utilizes a combination of pharmacological and non pharmacological therapies in synergy to control pain and reduce dependence on strictly opioids. Combining the effects of medications or therapies that focus on treating different types or sources of pain such as inflammatory pain, neurological pain, etc. With the adoption of this method of pain management, the longstanding effects of the opioid …


Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, Maria A. Hendrix Jun 2016

Complex Regional Pain Syndrome, Maria A. Hendrix

Nursing Student Class Projects (Formerly MSN)

Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic and often disabling condition that is seen in many patients seeking pain management. The condition leaves patients in excruciating pain that is disproportionate to the inciting injury. In addition, patients with this pain disorder experience abnormal sensations such as cold and heat allodynia, hyperalgesia, edema, abnormal sudomotor activity and trophic changes (D. Lee et al., 2015). CRPS disproportionally affects four times as many women as men (Alexander, Peterlin, Perreault, Grothusen, & Schwartzman, 2012). There are two types of CRPS: type 1, often referred to as reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), is not evident …


Protein Kinase A And Epac Mediate Chronic Pain After Injury: Prolonged Inhibition By Endogenous Y1 Receptors In Dorsal Horn, Weisi Fu Jan 2016

Protein Kinase A And Epac Mediate Chronic Pain After Injury: Prolonged Inhibition By Endogenous Y1 Receptors In Dorsal Horn, Weisi Fu

Theses and Dissertations--Physiology

Inflammation or nerve injury sensitizes several populations of nociceptive neurons in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, including those that express the neuropeptide Y (NPY) Y1 receptor (Y1R). Our overall hypothesis is that after tissue or nerve injury, these Y1R-expressing neurons enter a state of latent sensitization (LS) that contributes to vulnerability to the development of chronic pain; furthermore, LS is under the tonic inhibitory control of endogenous Y1R signaling. First, we evaluated the intracellular signaling pathways that become activated in Y1R-expressing neurons and participate in LS. To do this, we established behavioral models of inflammatory or neuropathic pain, …


Enhanced Formalin Nociceptive Responses Following L5 Nerve Ligation In The Rat Reveals Neuropathy-Induced Inflammatory Hyperalgesia, Renee R. Donahue, Perry N. Fuchs Jan 2001

Enhanced Formalin Nociceptive Responses Following L5 Nerve Ligation In The Rat Reveals Neuropathy-Induced Inflammatory Hyperalgesia, Renee R. Donahue, Perry N. Fuchs

Renee R. Donahue

The development of mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity following peripheral nerve injury is well known and a great deal of research has been directed towards understanding the mechanisms underlying these phenomena. However, there has been very little research examining if hypersensitivity to an inflammatory condition following nerve injury also develops. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to determine if hypersensitivity to an inflammatory condition produced in the formalin test develops following ligation of the L5 spinal nerve. Male Sprague–Dawley rats received tight ligation of the L5 spinal nerve or were given sham surgery. Following a 14-day recovery period, the …