Your Article Summary
Methods for Monitoring Medication Use in Chronic Pain Patients
Advances in Pain Management, 06/30/09
Gatchel RJ - In this article, the best methods for assessing chronic pain patients who are potentially at risk of misuse or abuse of pain reduction medications are highlighted. The author recommends that comprehensive biopsychosocial assessments of such patients should be conducted using instruments specifically developed for evaluating the potential for abuse/misuse. The Pain Medication Questionnaire is discussed as an example of one such tool. The advantages of this comprehensive assessment approach, which has been shown to be the most heuristic perspective for the evaluation and treatment of chronic pain, are reviewed. Finally, an algorithm for the ongoing evaluation of patients undergoing opioid treatment is presented.
Related Articles
Brain Gray Matter Decrease in Chronic Pain Is the Consequence and Not the Cause of Pain
Journal of Neuroscience, 11/10/09
Relevance Score: 84%
Chronic pain alters the structure of the brain
Schmerz, 10/20/09
Relevance Score: 84%
Prognosis for patients with chronic low back pain: inception cohort study
British Medical Journal, 10/09/09
Relevance Score: 84%
Psychiatry and chronic pain: Examining the interface and designing a structure for a patient-center approach to treatment
European Journal of Pain, 11/12/09
Relevance Score: 83%
What is the Case for Prescribing Long-Acting Opioids Over Short-Acting Opioids for Patients with Chronic Pain? A Critical Review
Pain Practice, 10/30/09
Relevance Score: 83%
Today in Pain Management...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Comparison of patient-controlled analgesia with and without dexmedetomidine following spine surgery in children
Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, 12/15/09
A Comparison of Common Screening Methods for Predicting Aberrant Drug-Related Behavior among Patients Receiving Opioids for Chronic Pain Management
Pain Medicine, 12/15/09
Comparative, double-blind, controlled study of intra-articular hyaluronic acid (Hyalubrix(R)) injections versus local anesthetic in osteoarthritis of the hip
Arthritis Research & Therapy, 12/14/09

See Latest Articles