S
Sudhir Diwan
Researcher at Lenox Hill Hospital
Publications - 68
Citations - 4935
Sudhir Diwan is an academic researcher from Lenox Hill Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Lumbar. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 61 publications receiving 4250 citations. Previous affiliations of Sudhir Diwan include Cornell University & Texas Tech University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Lumbar interlaminar epidural injections in managing chronic low back and lower extremity pain: a systematic review.
TL;DR: The evidence based on this systematic review is limited for blind interlaminar epidurals in managing all types of pain except for short-term relief of pain secondary to disc herniation and radiculitis.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Polyanalgesic Consensus Conference (PACC): Recommendations on Intrathecal Drug Infusion Systems Best Practices and Guidelines
Timothy R. Deer,Jason E. Pope,Salim M. Hayek,Anjum Bux,Eric Buchser,Sam Eldabe,Jose De Andres,Michael A. Erdek,Dennis Patin,Jay S. Grider,Daniel M. Doleys,Marilyn S. Jacobs,Tony L. Yaksh,Lawrence Poree,Mark S. Wallace,Joshua P. Prager,Richard Rauck,Oscar DeLeon,Sudhir Diwan,Steven M. Falowski,Helena M. Gazelka,Philip Kim,Philip Kim,Michael S. Leong,Robert M. Levy,Gladstone C. McDowell,Porter McRoberts,Ramana K. Naidu,Samir Narouze,Christophe Perruchoud,Steven M. Rosen,William S. Rosenberg,Michael Saulino,Peter S. Staats,Lisa Stearns,Dean Willis,Elliot S. Krames,Marc A. Huntoon,Nagy Mekhail +38 more
TL;DR: Pain treatment is best performed when a patient‐centric, safety‐based philosophy is used to determine an algorithmic process to guide care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic review of caudal epidural injections in the management of chronic low back pain.
TL;DR: A systematic review of caudal epidural injections with or without steroids in managing chronic pain secondary to lumbar disc herniation or radiculitis, post-lumbar laminectomy syndrome, spinal stenosis, and chronic discogenic pain showed Level I evidence for relief of chronic pain.
Journal Article
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians (ASIPP) guidelines for responsible opioid prescribing in chronic non-cancer pain
Laxmaiah Manchikanti,Salahadin Abdi,Sairam Atluri,Carl C. Balog,Ramsin M Benyamin,Mark V. Boswell,Keith R. Brown,Brian Mendoza Bruel,David A. Bryce,Patricia A. Burks,Allen W. Burton,Aaron K. Calodney,David Caraway,Kimberly A Cash,Paul J. Christo,Kim S Damron,Sukdeb Datta,Timothy R. Deer,Sudhir Diwan,Ike Eriator,Frank J E Falco,Bert Fellows,Stephanie Geffert,Christopher Gharibo,Scott E. Glaser,Jay S. Grider,Haroon Hameed,Mariam Hameed,Hans Hansen,Michael E. Harned,Salim M. Hayek,Standiford Helm,Joshua A Hirsch,Jeffrey W. Janata,Alan D. Kaye,Adam M. Kaye,David Kloth,Dhanalakshmi Koyyalagunta,Marion Lee,Yogesh Malla,Kavita N. Manchikanti,Carla D McManus,Vidyasagar Pampati,Allan T. Parr,Ramarao Pasupuleti,Vikram B. Patel,Nalini Sehgal,Sanford M. Silverman,Vijay P. Singh,Howard S. Smith,Lee T. Snook,Daneshvari R. Solanki,Deborah H. Tracy,Ricardo Vallejo,Bradley W. Wargo +54 more
TL;DR: The focus of these guidelines is to curtail the abuse of opioids without jeopardizing non-cancer pain management with opioids, and to reduce the incidence of abuse and drug diversion.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic evaluation of prevalence and diagnostic accuracy of sacroiliac joint interventions.
Thomas T. Simopoulos,Laxmaiah Manchikanti,Vijay P. Singh,Sanjeeva Gupta,Haroon Hameed,Sudhir Diwan,Steven P. Cohen +6 more
TL;DR: Based on this systematic review, theevidence for the diagnostic accuracy of sacroiliac joint injections is good, the evidence for provocation maneuvers is fair, and evidence for imaging is limited.