Pain Clinics

Nerves glow to help surgery

A great atricle  to assist with nerve surgery.  oringinal article @  http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-02/uoc--fph020411.php

Fluorescent peptides help nerves glow in surgery

Accidental damage to thin or buried nerves during surgery can have severe consequences, from chronic pain to permanent paralysis. Scientists at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine may have found a remedy: injectable fluorescent peptides that cause hard-to-see peripheral nerves to glow, alerting surgeons to their location even before the nerves are encountered.

The findings are published in the Feb. 6 advance online edition of the journal Nature Biotechnology.

Nerve preservation is important in almost every kind of surgery, but it can be challenging, said Quyen T. Nguyen, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Head and Neck Surgery and the study's corresponding author. "For example, if the nerves are invaded by a tumor. Or, if surgery is required in the setting of trauma or infection, the affected nerves might not look as they normally would, or their location may be distorted."

Nguyen and colleagues at the Moores Cancer Center developed and injected a systemic, fluorescently labeled peptide (a protein fragment consisting of amino acids) into mice. The peptide preferentially binds to peripheral nerve tissue, creating a distinct contrast (up to tenfold) from adjacent non-nerve tissues. The effect occurs within two hours and lasts for six to eight hours, with no observable effect upon the activity of the fluorescent nerves or behavior of the animals.

"Of course, we have yet to test the peptide in patients, but we have shown that the fluorescent probe also labels nerves in human tissue samples," Nguyen said. Interestingly, fluorescence labeling occurs even in nerves that have been damaged or severed, provided they retain a blood supply. The discovery suggests fluorescence labeling might be a useful tool in future surgeries to repair injured nerves.

Currently, the ability to avoid accidental damage to nerves during surgery depends primarily upon the skill of the surgeon, and electromyographic monitoring. This technique employs stimulating electrodes to identify motor nerves, but not sensory nerves such as the neurovascular bundle around the prostate gland, damage of which can lead to urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction following prostate surgery.

The new study complements earlier work in surgical molecular navigation by Nguyen and Roger Tsien, PhD, Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, UCSD professor of pharmacology, chemistry and biochemistry, a co-author of the paper and co-winner of the 2008 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work on green fluorescent protein. In 2010, for example, the scientists and colleagues published papers describing the use of activated, fluorescent probes to tag cancer cells in mice. The ultimate goal of their work is to help surgeons identify and remove all malignant tissues by lighting up cancer cells, thus reducing the chance of recurrence and improving patient survival rates.

"The analogy I use is that when construction workers are excavating, they need a map showing where the existing underground electrical cables are actually buried, not just old plans of questionable accuracy," said Tsien. "Likewise when surgeons are taking out tumors, they need a live map showing where the nerves are actually located, not just a static diagram of where they usually lie in the average patient."

The researchers continue to refine their probes in animal models and prepare for eventual human clinical trials.

Race Determine Pain Treatment

Medicine takes a new look about  racial bias in pain treatment

He is an article about differentail treatment of pain when it comes to race.  Read on.


'Years of research show black patients getting less treatment in the American health care system than their white counterparts, but a new study suggests that a quick dose of empathy helps close racial gaps in pain treatment.

College students and nurses went to greater lengths to ease the pain of members of their own race in a study led by Brian Drwecki, a psychology graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"I want to be very clear about this: We're not saying health care professionals are racist," Drwecki says. "This is not racism. Racism is a conscious act of hate. We find it very unlikely that health care professionals are aware that they are making these biases, let alone trying to actively hurt black patients."

Empathy emerged as a strong unconscious factor driving racial bias in pain treatment in the study, published online in February in the journal PAIN by Drwecki and colleagues from UW-Madison and the University of Northern British Columbia.

Study subjects watched the faces of shoulder pain sufferers in videos recorded while the patients were being put through range-of-motion tests. After assessing the patients' grimaces and furrowed brows, the study participants doled out treatment (pain medication, physical therapy, massage and acupuncture) in varying amounts.

White participants ordered significantly more pain treatment for white patients, and scored higher on tests measuring the empathy they felt for the patients who received preferential treatment. Despite a vast difference in experience and knowledge — the students had no medical training, while nurses are often directly involved in trying to monitor pain and keep patients comfortable — the two groups showed very similar biases.

"The students' results were consistent with the nurses' results, supporting the idea that individuals are predisposed to racial bias in pain treatment before or after health care training," Drwecki says.

The researchers have a promising, simple and cheap prescription for the problem. Simply asking the students and nurses to briefly put themselves in their patients' shoes had a drastic effect on their decisions.

"With half of our participants, we said, 'Before you make your treatment decisions, spend a moment imagining how your patient feels about his or her pain and how this pain is affecting his or her life,'" Drwecki says.

The quick shift of perspective reduced the pain treatment gap by 98 percent for the students and 55 percent among the nurses in the study, which was funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

"The cool thing is, as humans, we can increase our empathy," Drwecki says. "You may not be the most naturally empathic person, but you can try these interventions and feel them working. Yes, this study demonstrates that racial bias in pain treatment exists, but, more importantly, it teaches us that it's not inevitable."

Moreover, Drwecki believes empathy's role in health care — in treatment decisions like pain therapy and factors such as emergency room wait times — is ripe for more study.

"There are numerous studies showing similar effects in the real world," Drwecki said. "It's time to not only accept that these racial biases exist, but also to figure out how to eliminate them."

Say no to Chiro for Children

Say no to chiropractics for young children

Author Marrcello Costawho is a Professor of Neurophysiology, Department of Physiology at Flinders University 

Chiropractic, one of the several popular so-called complementary and alternative medicines(1), should never be applied to children. It simply isn’t based on credible scientific evidence.

A practitioner filled with messianic fervor founded the chiropractic discipline in the latter part of the nineteenth century.

DD Palmer wrote “we must have a religious head, one who is the founder, as did Christ, Mohamed, Jo. Smith (founder of the Church of the Latter Days Saint movement), Mrs. Eddy (founder of the Christian Science church), Martin Luther (who did not found any religion) and others who have founded religions. I am the fountain head. I am the founder of chiropractic in its science, in its art, in its philosophy and in its religious phase.”(2)

Chiropractic maintains that most, if not all diseases, are due to some kind of misalignment of the vertebrae of the spine. The proposed underlying “subluxations” could be corrected by a special manipulation with a “high velocity, low amplitude thrusts” which reconstitute the flow of a mysterious “universal intelligence”. A significant proportion of orthodox chiropractors still hold this view.

The reality is that such chiropractic “subluxations” of the spine simply do not exist and that spinal manipulations have no bearing on general diseases unrelated to the spine........" Read more

http://theconversation.edu.au/articles/a-neuroscientists-view-spare-children-the-manipulations-of-chiropractic-quackery-939

London Pain Clinic

Dr. Ali's pain clinic in London specialises in the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic pain.  A written referral from your GP, a fellow consultant, physiotherapist, osteopath or chiropractor is required.

Private appointments

Harley Street
10, Harley Street
London
W1G 9PF

PA: Helen
Telephone: 020 7467 8464
Fax: 020 7467 8312

Pain Clinic Sydney Australia

Pain Clinic -Neck and lower Back pain Problems

 
Treatments for neck and lower back pain problems at Longy's Pain Clinic, Sydney Australia.

Longy treats many common conditions at his pain clinic. Not just neck and lower back pain problems but other debilitating conditions, including:

Ligament, tendon and muscle strains of the neck, shoulder, lower back, hips, upper and lower limbs.

To visit Longy Pain Clinic or if you require further information click here  pain clinic .

Pain Clinic United States

Pain Clinic United States

Pain Clinic, MD Atlanta Georgia Pain Management


Atlanta Georgia Pain Management Clinic Our goal as an Atlanta pain management clinic is to provide long-term and permanent pain relief when possible. In many conditions, permanent pain relief may not be possible but we will always strive to improve our patients quality of life. In cases where fibromyalgia treatment has been a dismal failure with only short term or no real relief at the hands of other pain management clinics, better than 70% of the time our results have been long term and occasionally provided permanent pain relief. Pain Clinic Details.


 Pain Relief Clinic, MD | 1395 Marietta Pkwy | Marietta, GA | 770-425-8700

Pain Clinic Hong Kong

Pain Clinic Hong Kong

The Pain Management Clinic provides comprehensive management for patients with pain problems. This service aims to reduce pain levels, and to improve the patients functional status and quality of life.

The clinic provides a consultation service for patients with either acute or chronic pain, irrespective of the cause. Conditions as diverse as acute post-operative pain, chronic malignant or non-malignant pain, neuropathic pain disorder, musculoskeletal pain, and many other pain syndromes will all be catered for. Management encompasses conservative therapy, such as counseling and medication, as well as interventional treatments.

For further information or to make an appointment, please contact the Pain Clinic registration desk.

Pain Management Clinic
Location     Hong Kong Adventist Hospital
40 Stubbs Road, Hong Kong
Telephone     (852) 3651 8808

Pain Clinic Canada

Pain Clinic Canada

Cottage Pain Clinic
The Treatment of Pain

"CHRONIC PAIN" or acutely chronic pain is defined as a pain that persists for longer than four weeks. Chronic and aberrantly chronic pain sufferers are at epidemic levels. Estimates calculate one in five suffer from one type or another. In Canada alone this translates to over five million people.  Visit the Cottage Pain Clinic http://www.cottagepainclinic.com/index.html

Back Treatment

Lower Back Pain

Pain Treatment