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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Transition from acute to chronic postsurgical pain: risk factors and protective factors

TLDR
It is argued that a focus on the transition from acute to chronic pain may reveal important cues that will help to predict who will go on to develop chronic pain and who will not and how to identify the risk factors and protective factors that predict the course of recovery.
Abstract
Most patients who undergo surgery recover uneventfully and resume their normal daily activities within weeks. Nevertheless, chronic postsurgical pain develops in an alarming proportion of patients. The prevailing approach of focusing on established chronic pain implicitly assumes that information generated during the acute injury phase is not important to the subsequent development of chronic pain. However, a rarely appreciated fact is that every chronic pain was once acute. Here, we argue that a focus on the transition from acute to chronic pain may reveal important cues that will help us to predict who will go on to develop chronic pain and who will not. Unlike other injuries, surgery presents a unique set of circumstances in which the precise timing of the physical insult and ensuing pain are known in advance. This provides an opportunity, before surgery, to identify the risk factors and protective factors that predict the course of recovery. In this paper, the epidemiology of chronic postsurgical pain...

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Citations
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Prevention of Chronic Postsurgical Pain and Opioid Use in At-Risk Veterans: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Study

TL;DR: Three months following the intervention, veterans receiving ACT exhibited quicker cessation of pain and opioid use, suggesting that focusing on preoperative pain management may help prevent chronic postsurgical pain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Differences in the Incidence of Severe Pain Events Following Surgery: A Review of 333,000 Pain Scores

TL;DR: Female patients experience greater mean pain scores, as well as a higher incidence of SPE, on POD 1 for a variety of surgical procedures, compared with male patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Persistent postsurgical pain.

TL;DR: There are large gaps in the evidence base and more large controlled trials are warranted, and there is a clear need for more high-quality randomized trials.
Journal Article

Current concept review

Journal ArticleDOI

A Systematic Review of Behavioral and Environmental Interventions for Procedural Pain Management in Preterm Infants.

TL;DR: Findings from published randomized controlled trials that tested the effects of behavioral and environmental procedural pain management interventions on behavioral pain response in preterm infants found facilitated tucking, oral sucrose, and kangaroo care significantly mitigates biobehavioral pain response associated with acutely painful procedures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring the thickness of the human cerebral cortex from magnetic resonance images

TL;DR: An automated method for accurately measuring the thickness of the cerebral cortex across the entire brain and for generating cross-subject statistics in a coordinate system based on cortical anatomy is presented.
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A peripheral mononeuropathy in rat that produces disorders of pain sensation like those seen in man.

TL;DR: A peripheral mononeuropathy was produced in adult rats by placing loosely constrictive ligatures around the common sciatic nerve and the postoperative behavior of these rats indicated that hyperalgesia, allodynia and, possibly, spontaneous pain were produced.
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Neuronal plasticity: increasing the gain in pain.

TL;DR: Here, a conceptual framework for the contribution of plasticity in primary sensory and dorsal horn neurons to the pathogenesis of pain is developed, identifying distinct forms of Plasticity, which are term activation, modulation, and modification, that by increasing gain, elicit pain hypersensitivity.
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