- All categories
- Acute and Post-Operative Pain
- Cancer-related Pain
- Chronic Noncancer Pain
- Comorbid Conditions
- Fibromyalgia
- Headache
- Interventional Modalites
- Low Back Pain
- Medico-Legal-Ethical Issues
- Neuropathic Pain
- Nonopioid Pharmacotherapy
- Nonpharmacologic Treatment
- Opioid Pharmacotherapy
- Osteoarthritis
- Palliative Care
- Risk Management
- Scientific Perspectives
- Special Patient Populations
-
Pain & Aging: 3rd Annual Perry Fine Lecture at West Virginia University
Perry Fine, MDAs the population ages, more individuals will be living with chronic pain, resulting in increased morbidity, mortality, and healthcare utilization.
-
Sex, Gender, and Pain: A Review of Recent Clinical and Experimental Findings
Roger B. Fillingim, PhDThe effects of sex and gender on the subjective experience of pain and analgesic response have generated marked scientific and clinical interest over the last decade. Women are at greater risk for many painful conditions and are more sensitive...
-
Integrating Nonpharmacologic and Alternative Strategies into a Comprehensive Management Approach for Older Adults with Pain
Patricia Bruckenthal, PhD, RN, APRN-CPain in older adults is underreported and under-treated. Physical changes associated with getting older, increased cognitive impairment, and patient beliefs that pain is an inevitable consequence of aging are just a few of the factors that...
-
Racial Differences in Osteoarthritis Pain and Function: Potential Explanatory Factors
Kelli D. Allen, PhDMultiple studies of African-American patients have noted differences in osteoarthritis (OA) symptoms compared with Caucasians, including higher levels of reported pain and increased limitations in activity.
-
Management of Headache in the Elderly
Matthew S. Robbins, MDDiagnosis and management of headache can be challenging in older patients. New-onset headache is rare in this population and is usually a symptom of another disorder.
-
Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Pain: Causes and Consequences of Unequal Care
Karen O. Anderson, PhD, MPHA review of the recent literature suggests that racial and ethnic disparities in pain assessment, analgesic treatment, and patient outcomes continue to exist across various acute and chronic pain conditions.
-
Hippocampal correlates of pain in healthy elderly adults: A pilot study
Molly E. Zimmerman, PhDPrevious imaging studies of patients with chronic pain have identified abnormalities in the thalamus, prefrontal cortex, cingulate, and somatosensory cortex, each of which is involved in nociceptive processing.
-
Relative Pain Levels in Patients at High Risk for Substance Misuse
Robert N. Jamison, PhDThe Screener and Opioid Assessment for Patients with Pain (SOAPP) is a brief self-report questionnaire that assesses patients for risk factors associated with potential opioid misuse. Jamison et al. sought to identify differences among patients...
-
Pain-Behavioral Assessment Tools in the Nursing Home
Keela Herr, PhD, RN, FAAN, AGSFThe gold standard for assessing pain is patient self-report. The high prevalence and undertreatment of pain among nursing home residents, however, demand that clinicians are also familiar with techniques to evaluate pain in nonverbal older...
-
Internet-delivered family cognitive–behavioral therapy for children and adolescents with chronic pain
Tonya M. Palermo, PhDCognitive–behavioral therapy (CBT) is a valuable psychotherapeutic modality for chronic pain that commonly includes relaxation training, activity pacing, problem solving, and distraction techniques.






