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Stephen Butler

Researcher at Uppsala University

Publications -  24
Citations -  193

Stephen Butler is an academic researcher from Uppsala University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Population. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 24 publications receiving 137 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen Butler include Uppsala University Hospital & Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

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Chronic widespread pain-the need for a standard definition.

TL;DR: Chronic widespread pain is now frequently used as a diagnosis on its own and the variability of prevalence data for CWP and FMS can be due to the different definitions which refer to different populations.
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Revised chronic widespread pain criteria: development from and integration with fibromyalgia criteria

TL;DR: It is suggested that CWP can be better defined by combining 4-region pain and a total pain site score ≥7 (WP2019), which provides a simple, unambiguous measure that is suitable for clinical and research use as a standalone diagnosis that is integrated with fibromyalgia definitions.
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Adverse childhood experiences influence development of pain during pregnancy.

TL;DR: To investigate the association between adverse childhood experiences (ACE) and pain with onset during pregnancy, a large number of patients were randomly assigned to receive either aACE or non- ACE vaccination during pregnancy.
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Neglect-like signs and symptoms in CRPS.

TL;DR: It is considered that EVENDOL, an objective measure of behavioural signs, meets these 2 requirements and is freely available for use in clinical settings, if the above is deemed convincing, or for validation procedures if greater assurance is desired.
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Chronic neuropathic pain after traumatic peripheral nerve injuries in the upper extremity: prevalence, demographic and surgical determinants, impact on health and on pain medication

TL;DR: A high prevalence of chronic pain and neuropathic pain with a negative impact on quality of life and disability were found in patients after traumatic nerve injury.