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Devi E. Nampiaparampil
Researcher at New York University
Publications - Â 33
Citations - Â 2105
Devi E. Nampiaparampil is an academic researcher from New York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Low back pain. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 33 publications receiving 1857 citations. Previous affiliations of Devi E. Nampiaparampil include Veterans Health Administration & Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence of Chronic Pain After Traumatic Brain Injury: A Systematic Review
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Ovid/MEDLINE database to search for articles published between 1951 and February 2008 using any combination of the terms brain injury, pain, headache, blast injury, and combat (combat disorders, war, military medicine, wounds and injuries, military personnel, veterans).
Prevalence of Chronic Pain After Traumatic Brain Injury
TL;DR: The prevalence of chronic pain as an underdiagnosed consequence of TBI is determined and the interaction between chronic pain and severity of T BI as well as the characteristics of pain after TBI among civilians and combatants are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Systematic Review and Best Evidence Synthesis of the Effectiveness of Therapeutic Facet Joint Interventions in Managing Chronic Spinal Pain.
Laxmaiah Manchikanti,Alan D. Kaye,Mark V. Boswell,Sanjay Bakshi,Christopher Gharibo,Vahid Grami,Jay S. Grider,Sanjeeva Gupta,Sachin Sunny Jha,Dharam P Mann,Devi E. Nampiaparampil,Manohar Sharma,Lindsay N Shroyer,Vijay P. Singh,Amol Soin,Ricardo Vallejo,Bradley W. Wargo,Joshua A Hirsch +17 more
TL;DR: Based on the present assessment for the management of spinal facet joint pain, the evidence for long-term improvement is Level II for lumbar and cervical radiofrequency neurotomy, and therapeutic facet joint nerve blocks in the cervical, thoracic, andlumbar spine.
Journal Article
A review of fibromyalgia.
TL;DR: The goal in treating fibromyalgia is to decrease pain and to increase function without promoting polypharmacy, and brief interdisciplinary programs have been shown to improve subjective pain.
Journal ArticleDOI
Efficacy of Epidural Injections in Managing Chronic Spinal Pain: A Best Evidence Synthesis
Alan D. Kaye,Laxmaiah Manchikanti,Salahadin Abdi,Sairam Atluri,Sanjay Bakshi,Ramsin M Benyamin,Mark V. Boswell,Ricardo M. Buenaventura,Kenneth D. Candido,Harold Cordner,Sukdeb Datta,Gulshan Doulatram,Christopher Gharibo,Vahid Grami,Sanjeeva Gupta,Sachin Sunny Jha,Eugene D. Kaplan,Yogesh Malla,Dharam P Mann,Devi E. Nampiaparampil,Gabor B. Racz,P. Prithvi Raj,Maunak V. Rana,Manohar Sharma,Vijay P. Singh,Amol Soin,Peter S. Staats,Ricardo Vallejo,Bradley W. Wargo,Joshua A Hirsch +29 more
TL;DR: The efficacy of epidural injections in managing a multitude of chronic spinal conditions is shown, with an assessment of the quality of manuscripts and outcome parameters, shows.