Anesthesia News

Anesthesia

sponsor
Become a Member Today!
Register
Email:


Password:

Remember me
Forgot your Password?
Invite Code?
Article ID

Your Article Summary

(Click the title below to leave the MDLinx Network and go to the Journal's Website)

Benham A et al. - In this paper, the authors debate the possibility of using the self-report of the overall intensity of needle sensation as a predictor of analgesic outcome to acupuncture. The authors describe previous research which has focused on developing tools to capture the nature of the descriptors used by patients when they self-report needle sensation and reveal that little attention has been given to its role in outcome. The authors demonstrate that needle sensation is a complex phenomenon with subjects using multiple descriptors to report their experience. The authorse argue that the intensity of the overall experience of needle sensation may prove useful as a gross marker of the adequacy of acupuncture. The authors briefly describe their research which isolates individual components of needling technique, such as depth of needle penetration and bidirectional needle rotation, in order to assess their contribution to overall needle sensation intensity.


Today in Pain Management...keeping you current

Pediatric Pain After Ambulatory Surgery: Where's the Medication?
Pediatrics, 10/01/09

Epidural Analgesia in the Latent Phase of Labor and the Risk of Cesarean Delivery: A Five-year Randomized Controlled Trial
Anesthesiology, 09/11/09

Ultrasound guidance for peripheral nerve blockade
Cochrane Reviews, 10/12/09

Article Search

Keyword:

Search:

Published within

Sort By:
Date
Relevance


Sponsor

Send this Summary to a Colleague

Enter email address