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Errol M. Gould

Researcher at Endo International plc

Publications -  31
Citations -  576

Errol M. Gould is an academic researcher from Endo International plc. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oxymorphone & Pain assessment. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 29 publications receiving 537 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The dimensions of pain quality: factor analysis of the Pain Quality Assessment Scale.

TL;DR: The findings support the hypothesis that pain qualities cluster into distinct groups and may provide clinicians and researchers with a useful way to summarize data from pain quality measures, and may also provide meaningful end points that would allow for treatment differentiation between various pharmacologic entities.
Journal Article

A Comparison of the Lidocaine Patch 5% vs Naproxen 500 mg Twice Daily for the Relief of Pain Associated With Carpal Tunnel Syndrome: A 6-Week, Randomized, Parallel-Group Study

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the lidocaine patch 5% is effective in significantly relieving the pain associated with CTS and is well tolerated, and the patch may offer patients an effective, nonsystemic, noninvasive treatment for the management of their symptoms.
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Comparison of the effectiveness and tolerability of lidocaine patch 5% versus celecoxib for osteoarthritis-related knee pain: post hoc analysis of a 12 week, prospective, randomized, active-controlled, open-label, parallel-group trial in adults.

TL;DR: Statistically significant differences in effectiveness and tolerability were not found between these 2 treatments in these patients with OA knee pain and a post hoc analysis of the available data is presented here.
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Treatment Satisfaction in Osteoarthritis and Chronic Low Back Pain: The Role of Pain, Physical and Emotional Functioning, Sleep, and Adverse Events

TL;DR: The results of multivariate analyses indicated that improvements in measures of pain intensity, pain relief, and interference with physical functioning each made independent contributions to treatment satisfaction in both groups of patients.
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Opioid prescribing practices in chronic pain management: guidelines do not sufficiently influence clinical practice.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the availability of pain-treatment guidelines, recommendations, and education alone may not be enough to influence opioid-prescribing practices in the treatment of chronic pain.