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1.
J Can Assoc Gastroenterol ; 7(2): 204-211, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38596807

RESUMO

Background: Many patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may use cannabis for relief of symptoms. During pregnancy, however, cannabis exposure may be associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. We aimed to determine the prevalence and perceptions of cannabis use in women with IBD. Methods: Through recruitment at Mount Sinai Hospital and online platforms such as Twitter, women with IBD (age 18-45) were asked to complete anonymous surveys on demographics, cannabis use, perception of use during pregnancy, and discussing its use with healthcare providers (HCP). Categorical variables were reported as frequencies and compared across groups with the chi-square test. Results: One-hundred and two pregnant patients with IBD were included in this study, 19 (18.6%) reported using cannabis. Current users were more likely to report constant pain in the last 12 months and discuss its use with their HCP. Fifty-three (52.0%) women were unsure of the specific risks associated with cannabis use during pregnancy, and only 15 (14.7%) had ever discussed its use with their HCP. Those who had discussed cannabis use with their HCP were more likely to have prior IBD-related surgery, perceive its use unsafe during pregnancy, and be more likely to be using cannabis. Conclusion: Many women with IBD report uncertainty of the risks of cannabis use during pregnancy and the majority have never discussed cannabis use with their providers. With the increasing legalization of cannabis in many jurisdictions, it is imperative patients and healthcare providers discuss the risks and benefits of its use, particularly during vulnerable times such as pregnancy.

2.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med ; 12: 140-150, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38088992

RESUMO

Generalized joint hypermobility (GJH) often leads clinicians to suspect a diagnosis of Ehlers Danlos Syndrome (EDS), but it can be difficult to objectively assess. Video-based goniometry has been proposed to objectively estimate joint range of motion in hyperextended joints. As part of an exam of joint hypermobility at a specialized EDS clinic, a mobile phone was used to record short videos of 97 adults (89 female, 35.0 ± 9.9 years old) undergoing assessment of the elbows, knees, shoulders, ankles, and fifth fingers. Five body keypoint pose-estimation libraries (AlphaPose, Detectron, MediaPipe-Body, MoveNet - Thunder, OpenPose) and two hand keypoint pose-estimation libraries (AlphaPose, MediaPipe-Hands) were used to geometrically calculate the maximum angle of hyperextension or hyperflexion of each joint. A custom domain-specific model with a MobileNet-v2 backbone finetuned on data collected as part of this study was also evaluated for the fifth finger movement. Spearman's correlation was used to analyze the angles calculated from the tracked joint positions, the angles calculated from manually annotated keypoints, and the angles measured using a goniometer. Moderate correlations between the angles estimated using pose-tracked keypoints and the goniometer measurements were identified for the elbow (rho =.722; Detectron), knee (rho =.608; MoveNet - Thunder), shoulder (rho =.632; MoveNet - Thunder), and fifth finger (rho =.786; custom model) movements. The angles estimated from keypoints predicted by open-source libraries at the ankles were not significantly correlated with the goniometer measurements. Manually annotated angles at the elbows, knees, shoulders, and fifth fingers were moderately to strongly correlated to goniometer measurements but were weakly correlated for the ankles. There was not one pose-estimation library which performed best across all joints, so the library of choice must be selected separately for each joint of interest. This work evaluates several pose-estimation models as part of a vision-based system for estimating joint angles in individuals with suspected joint hypermobility. Future applications of the proposed system could facilitate objective assessment and screening of individuals referred to specialized EDS clinics.


Assuntos
Síndrome de Ehlers-Danlos , Articulação do Cotovelo , Instabilidade Articular , Adulto , Humanos , Feminino , Instabilidade Articular/diagnóstico , Amplitude de Movimento Articular , Articulação do Joelho , Síndrome de Ehlers-Danlos/diagnóstico
5.
BMJ Open ; 12(12): e068098, 2022 12 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36526308

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Ehlers-Danlos syndromes (EDS)/generalised hypermobility spectrum disorders (G-HSD) affect the connective tissue of the body and present with a heterogeneous set of symptoms that pose a challenge for diagnosis. One of the main diagnostic criteria of EDS/G-HSD is generalised joint hypermobility, which is currently assessed by clinicians during a physical exam. However, the practice for measuring joint hypermobility is inconsistent between clinicians, leading to high inter-rater variability. Often patients are misdiagnosed with EDS/G-HSD based on an incorrect hypermobility assessment, leading to increased referral rates and resource utilisation at specialised EDS clinics that results in unnecessary emotional distress for patients. An objective, validated and scalable method for assessing hypermobility might mitigate these issues and result in improved EDS/G-HSD patient care. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This study will examine the use of videos obtained using a smartphone camera to assess the range of motion (ROM) and hypermobility of the joints assessed in Beighton score and more (spine, shoulders, elbows, knees, ankles, thumbs and fifth fingers) in individuals with suspected EDS/G-HSD. Short videos of participants will be captured as they undergo a formal assessment of joint hypermobility at the GoodHope EDS Clinic at Toronto General Hospital. Clinicians will measure the ROM at each joint using a clinical-grade goniometer to establish ground truth measurements. Open-source human pose-estimation libraries will be used to extract the locations of key joints from the videos. Deterministic and machine learning systems will be developed and evaluated for estimating the ROM at each joint. Results will be analysed separately for each joint and human pose-estimation library. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study was approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University Health Network in Toronto on 26 April 2022. Participants will provide written informed consent. Findings from this study will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at conferences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05366114.


Assuntos
Síndrome de Ehlers-Danlos , Instabilidade Articular , Humanos , Instabilidade Articular/diagnóstico , Estudos de Viabilidade , Síndrome de Ehlers-Danlos/diagnóstico , Tecido Conjuntivo , Amplitude de Movimento Articular , Estudos Observacionais como Assunto
8.
J Patient Rep Outcomes ; 6(1): 44, 2022 May 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35524863

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Chronic pain management multi/interdisciplinary programs attempt to address all elements of the biopsychosocial model. The primary objective of this retrospective study (based on practice-based audit) was to determine the effectiveness of a patient-centered, comprehensive and intense interdisciplinary pain management program in a publicly funded community-based pain clinic in the Greater Toronto Area. METHOD: This retrospective longitudinal study was conducted on 218 carefully selected sequential chronic pain patients, with 158 completing a 3-4-month interdisciplinary program between January 2016 and December 2018. Data collected upon exit, at 6 months and 12 months post-discharge included demographic information, pain characteristics, emotional/functional status obtained by validated instruments and global impression of change (GIC). Additionally, social health outcomes (return to work or school) were retrieved through retrospective chart review. Means of pre-and post-program variables were compared to assess changes of each patient's "journey". RESULTS: Physical and mental/ emotional health outcomes at exit, 6 months and 12 months post-discharge, showed initial and sustained, statistically and clinically significant improvement from pre-treatment levels, with GIC (much/very much improved) reported as 77%, 58% and 76%, respectively. Additionally, a substantial positive change in social health outcomes was noted particularly in patients on disability (29%), part time workers gaining full time employment (55%), and students (71%) who improved their level of schooling. CONCLUSION: The study showed that careful patient selection in a community-based publicly funded interdisciplinary pain management program can produce significant improvement in pain, physical, mental/emotional health and social function, with sustained long-term outcomes.

9.
Pain Ther ; 10(2): 1413-1426, 2021 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34410629

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Little information exists regarding the characteristics of patients with chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) attending Canadian pain clinics. The study describes the demographics, pain characteristics and the diagnostic classification profile of such patients attending a university-affiliated community-based pain clinic in the Greater Toronto Area. METHODS: Retrospective descriptive study based on 644 unique consecutive CNCP patients assessed between January 2016 and December 2017. RESULTS: The female/male ratio was 1.6:1; 80% were younger than 65 years; 43% held some form of employment (full-time, part-time or self employment); median pain duration was 3 years; car accidents and medical conditions accounted for 28 and 27% of pain onset, respectively; 34% had four or more distinct areas of pain; and low back pain (LBP) was the most prevalent site (66%), but was the sole site of pain in less than a third of these patients. Age was positively associated with LBP prevalence. Self-reported health service utilization (visits to the emergency room, pain physician or psychologist) increased with patient psychopathology. Cannabis was used by 15% of the cohort and opioids by 34.5%, with only one in six opioid users exceeding 90 mg of morphine equivalent dose per day. Comparison of our data to three previously published studies from other Canadian pain clinics demonstrated both similarities and substantial differences between the populations. CONCLUSION: Our study highlights regional differences between CNCP population phenotypes. Recognition of biomedical, psychological and socio-environmental factors affecting pain should be considered for patient stratification and rational approaches to treatment, as "one size treatment does not fit all".

10.
Can J Anaesth ; 68(5): 633-644, 2021 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33469735

RESUMO

PURPOSE: We investigated patients with chronic pain seeking medical cannabis. We assessed their demographics, patterns of cannabis use, and the long-term effectiveness of cannabis on their pain and functional domains. METHODS: This observational study enrolled patients between 8 September 2015 and 31 July 2018 from community-based cannabis clinics in Ontario, Canada. In addition to collecting demographic information, the primary outcomes studied were pain intensity and pain-related interference scores assessed at baseline, three, six, and 12 months. Using validated questionnaires, we also assessed anxiety, depression, quality of life (QoL), general health symptoms, neuropathic pain, self-reported opioid consumption, and adverse events. RESULTS: Of the 1,000 patients consented, 757 (76%) participated at one or more of the study time points. At six and 12 months, 230 (30.4%) and 104 (13.7%) of participants were followed up, respectively. Most participants were female (62%), Caucasian (91%), and sought cannabis for pain relief (88%). Time was a significant factor associated with improvement in pain intensity (P < 0.001), pain-related interference scores (P < 0.001), QoL (P < 0.001), and general health symptoms (P < 0.001). Female sex was significantly associated with worse outcomes than male sex including pain intensity (P < 0.001) and pain-related interference (P < 0.001). The proportion of individuals who reported using opioids decreased by half, from 40.8% at baseline to 23.9% at 12 months. CONCLUSION: Despite significant challenges to collecting long-term observational data on patients who attempted a trial of cannabis products, approximately one-third of patients in the cohort remained on medical cannabis for six months. In this cohort, pain intensity and pain-related interference scores were reduced and QoL and general health symptoms scores were improved compared with baseline.


RéSUMé: OBJECTIF: Nous avons étudié des patients souffrant de douleur chronique et cherchant à obtenir du cannabis médical. Nous avons évalué leurs données démographiques, leurs habitudes de consommation de cannabis et l'efficacité à long terme du cannabis sur leur douleur et leurs domaines fonctionnels. MéTHODE: Cette étude observationnelle a recruté des patients entre le 8 septembre 2015 et le 31 juillet 2018 dans des cliniques communautaires de cannabis en Ontario, au Canada. En plus de recueillir des renseignements démographiques, les critères d'évaluation principaux étudiés étaient l'intensité de la douleur et les scores d'interférence liés à la douleur évalués au début de l'étude et à trois, six et 12 mois. À l'aide de questionnaires validés, nous avons également évalué l'anxiété, la dépression, la qualité de vie (QdV), les symptômes généraux de santé, la douleur neuropathique, la consommation d'opioïdes rapportée et les effets indésirables. RéSULTATS: Sur les 1000 patients consentants, 757 (76 %) ont participé à un ou plusieurs des points d'analyse de l'étude. À six et douze mois, 230 (30,4 %) et 104 (13,7 %) patients ont participé, respectivement. La plupart des participants étaient des femmes (62 %) d'origine caucasienne (91 %) et cherchaient à soulager leur douleur avec du cannabis (88 %). Le temps était un facteur important associé à l'amélioration de l'intensité de la douleur (P < 0,001), aux scores d'interférence liés à la douleur (P < 0,001), à la QdV (P < 0,001), et aux symptômes de santé généraux (P < 0,001). Le sexe féminin a été significativement associé à des pronostics moins bons que le sexe masculin, y compris en matière d'intensité de la douleur (P < 0,001) et d'interférences liées à la douleur (P < 0,001). La proportion de personnes qui ont déclaré utiliser des opioïdes a diminué de moitié, passant de 40,8 % au début de l'étude à 23,9 % à 12 mois. CONCLUSION: Malgré des défis importants dans la collecte de données observationnelles à long terme concernant les patients qui participent à une étude sur les produits du cannabis, environ un tiers des patients de la cohorte ont continué à prendre du cannabis médical pendant six mois. Dans cette cohorte, l'intensité de la douleur et les scores d'interférence liés à la douleur ont été réduits, et les scores de QdV et de symptômes généraux de santé se sont améliorés par rapport au début de la période à l'étude.


Assuntos
Dor Crônica , Maconha Medicinal , Dor Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Dor Crônica/epidemiologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Maconha Medicinal/uso terapêutico , Ontário/epidemiologia , Medidas de Resultados Relatados pelo Paciente , Estudos Prospectivos , Qualidade de Vida
11.
Int J Clin Pract ; 75(8): e13871, 2021 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33249713

RESUMO

AIMS: Opioid misuse and overuse have contributed to a widespread overdose crisis and many patients and physicians are considering medical cannabis to support opioid tapering and chronic pain control. Using a five-step modified Delphi process, we aimed to develop consensus-based recommendations on: 1) when and how to safely initiate and titrate cannabinoids in the presence of opioids, 2) when and how to safely taper opioids in the presence of cannabinoids and 3) how to monitor patients and evaluate outcomes when treating with opioids and cannabinoids. RESULTS: In patients with chronic pain taking opioids not reaching treatment goals, there was consensus that cannabinoids may be considered for patients experiencing or displaying opioid-related complications, despite psychological or physical interventions. There was consensus observed to initiate with a cannabidiol (CBD)-predominant oral extract in the daytime and consider adding tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). When adding THC, start with 0.5-3 mg, and increase by 1-2 mg once or twice weekly up to 30-40 mg/day. Initiate opioid tapering when the patient reports a minor/major improvement in function, seeks less as-needed medication to control pain and/or the cannabis dose has been optimised. The opioid tapering schedule may be 5%-10% of the morphine equivalent dose (MED) every 1 to 4 weeks. Clinical success could be defined by an improvement in function/quality of life, a ≥30% reduction in pain intensity, a ≥25% reduction in opioid dose, a reduction in opioid dose to <90 mg MED and/or reduction in opioid-related adverse events. CONCLUSIONS: This five-stage modified Delphi process led to the development of consensus-based recommendations surrounding the safe introduction and titration of cannabinoids in concert with tapering opioids.


Assuntos
Canabinoides , Dor Crônica , Analgésicos Opioides , Dor Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Consenso , Humanos , Qualidade de Vida
13.
Indian J Surg Oncol ; 10(1): 125-129, 2019 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30948886

RESUMO

Oral cancers are the most common cancer in India due to tobacco abuse in the form of chewing, smoking, and inhalation. Majority of these patients present late at advanced disease stage. Such patients have significant morbidity irrespective of the intent of treatment; the survival rate is very poor. To improve loco-regional control and survival, neoadjuvant chemotherapy has been started in many centers all over the world. To study the effect of injecting methotrexate as a single agent in (1) down-staging and increasing operability of oral cancers, (2) need for reconstructive surgery, and (3) recurrence. A total of 50 patients with biopsy-proven oral malignancy were selected over a period of 2 years from August 2014 to August 2016 for the study. Patients were subjected to weekly dose of injecting methotrexate 1 mg/kg given intravenously for 6 weeks. All patients underwent surgery after completing 6 cycles of methotrexate. A total 50 patients were started on inj. methotrexate of which 9 patients did not complete neoadjuvant chemotherapy. 53.7% of patients showed more than 50% decrease in tumor size. 29.26% of patients showed complete disappearance of cervical lymph nodes and 31.7% of patients showed more than 50% decrease in size of cervical lymph nodes. 48.78% of patients were managed with wide local excision with primary closure, decreasing the need of reconstructive surgery. 94.74% of patients did not show any recurrence in follow-up period of 1 year. Single agent methotrexate is effective in down-staging oral cancers, improving operability and decreasing morbidity and recurrence among patients.

15.
Sci Pharm ; 84(1): 19-40, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27110496

RESUMO

Fondaparinux sodium is a synthetic low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH). This medication is an anticoagulant or a blood thinner, prescribed for the treatment of pulmonary embolism and prevention and treatment of deep vein thrombosis. Its determination in the presence of related impurities was studied and validated by a novel ion-pair HPLC method. The separation of the drug and its degradation products was achieved with the polymer-based PLRPs column (250 mm × 4.6 mm; 5 µm) in gradient elution mode. The mixture of 100 mM n-hexylamine and 100 mM acetic acid in water was used as buffer solution. Mobile phase A and mobile phase B were prepared by mixing the buffer and acetonitrile in the ratio of 90:10 (v/v) and 20:80 (v/v), respectively. Mobile phases were delivered in isocratic mode (2% B for 0-5 min) followed by gradient mode (2-85% B in 5-60 min). An Evaporative Light Scattering Detector (ELSD) was connected to the LC system to detect the responses of chromatographic separation. Further, the drug was subjected to stress studies for acidic, basic, oxidative, photolytic, and thermal degradations as per ICH guidelines and the drug was found to be labile in acid, base hydrolysis, and oxidation, while stable in neutral, thermal, and photolytic degradation conditions. The method provided linear responses over the concentration range of the LOQ to 0.30% for each impurity with respect to the analyte concentration of 12.5 mg/mL, and regression analysis showed a correlation coefficient value (r(2)) of more than 0.99 for all the impurities. The LOD and LOQ were found to be 1.4 µg/mL and 4.1 µg/mL, respectively, for fondaparinux. The developed ion-pair method was validated as per ICH guidelines with respect to accuracy, selectivity, precision, linearity, and robustness.

16.
Proceedings VLDB Endowment ; 9(9): 624-635, 2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28149668

RESUMO

As scientific endeavors and data analysis become increasingly collaborative, there is a need for data management systems that natively support the versioning or branching of datasets to enable concurrent analysis, cleaning, integration, manipulation, or curation of data across teams of individuals. Common practice for sharing and collaborating on datasets involves creating or storing multiple copies of the dataset, one for each stage of analysis, with no provenance information tracking the relationships between these datasets. This results not only in wasted storage, but also makes it challenging to track and integrate modifications made by different users to the same dataset. In this paper, we introduce the Relational Dataset Branching System, Decibel, a new relational storage system with built-in version control designed to address these shortcomings. We present our initial design for Decibel and provide a thorough evaluation of three versioned storage engine designs that focus on efficient query processing with minimal storage overhead. We also develop an exhaustive benchmark to enable the rigorous testing of these and future versioned storage engine designs.

17.
Can Fam Physician ; 61(8): e372-81, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26505059

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: To determine if medical marijuana provides pain relief for patients with chronic noncancer pain (CNCP) and to determine the therapeutic dose, adverse effects, and specific indications. DATA SOURCES: In April 2014, MEDLINE and EMBASE searches were conducted using the terms chronic noncancer pain, smoked marijuana or cannabinoids, placebo and pain relief, or side effects or adverse events. STUDY SELECTION: An article was selected for inclusion if it evaluated the effect of smoked or vaporized cannabinoids (nonsynthetic) for CNCP; it was designed as a controlled study involving a comparison group, either concurrently or historically; and it was published in English in a peer-review journal. Outcome data on pain, function, dose, and adverse effects were collected, if available. All articles that were only available in abstract form were excluded. Synthesis A total of 6 randomized controlled trials (N = 226 patients) were included in this review; 5 of them assessed the use of medical marijuana in neuropathic pain as an adjunct to other concomitant analgesics including opioids and anticonvulsants. The 5 trials were considered to be of high quality; however, all of them had challenges with masking. Data could not be pooled owing to heterogeneity in delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol potency by dried weight, differing frequency and duration of treatment, and variability in assessing outcomes. All experimental sessions in the studies were of short duration (maximum of 5 days) and reported statistically significant pain relief with nonserious side effects. CONCLUSION: There is evidence for the use of low-dose medical marijuana in refractory neuropathic pain in conjunction with traditional analgesics. However, trials were limited by short duration, variability in dosing and strength of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, and lack of functional outcomes. Although well tolerated in the short term, the long-term effects of psychoactive and neurocognitive effects of medical marijuana remain unknown. Generalizing the use of medical marijuana to all CNCP conditions does not appear to be supported by existing evidence. Clinicians should exercise caution when prescribing medical marijuana for patients, especially in those with nonneuropathic CNCP.


Assuntos
Cannabis , Dor Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Maconha Medicinal/uso terapêutico , Neuralgia/tratamento farmacológico , Fitoterapia/métodos , Preparações de Plantas/uso terapêutico , Analgésicos/uso terapêutico , Quimioterapia Combinada , Humanos , Maconha Medicinal/efeitos adversos , Preparações de Plantas/efeitos adversos , Ensaios Clínicos Controlados Aleatórios como Assunto
18.
Proceedings VLDB Endowment ; 8(12): 1916-1919, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26844007

RESUMO

While there have been many solutions proposed for storing and analyzing large volumes of data, all of these solutions have limited support for collaborative data analytics, especially given the many individuals and teams are simultaneously analyzing, modifying and exchanging datasets, employing a number of heterogeneous tools or languages for data analysis, and writing scripts to clean, preprocess, or query data. We demonstrate DataHub, a unified platform with the ability to load, store, query, collaboratively analyze, interactively visualize, interface with external applications, and share datasets. We will demonstrate the following aspects of the DataHub platform: (a) flexible data storage, sharing, and native versioning capabilities: multiple conference attendees can concurrently update the database and browse the different versions and inspect conflicts; (b) an app ecosystem that hosts apps for various data-processing activities: conference attendees will be able to effortlessly ingest, query, and visualize data using our existing apps; (c) thrift-based data serialization permits data analysis in any combination of 20+ languages, with DataHub as the common data store: conference attendees will be able to analyze datasets in R, Python, and Matlab, while the inputs and the results are still stored in DataHub. In particular, conference attendees will be able to use the DataHub notebook - an IPython-based notebook for analyzing data and storing the results of data analysis.

19.
Proceedings VLDB Endowment ; 8(12): 1346-1357, 2015 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28752014

RESUMO

The relative ease of collaborative data science and analysis has led to a proliferation of many thousands or millions of versions of the same datasets in many scientific and commercial domains, acquired or constructed at various stages of data analysis across many users, and often over long periods of time. Managing, storing, and recreating these dataset versions is a non-trivial task. The fundamental challenge here is the storage-recreation trade-off: the more storage we use, the faster it is to recreate or retrieve versions, while the less storage we use, the slower it is to recreate or retrieve versions. Despite the fundamental nature of this problem, there has been a surprisingly little amount of work on it. In this paper, we study this trade-off in a principled manner: we formulate six problems under various settings, trading off these quantities in various ways, demonstrate that most of the problems are intractable, and propose a suite of inexpensive heuristics drawing from techniques in delay-constrained scheduling, and spanning tree literature, to solve these problems. We have built a prototype version management system, that aims to serve as a foundation to our DataHub system for facilitating collaborative data science. We demonstrate, via extensive experiments, that our proposed heuristics provide efficient solutions in practical dataset versioning scenarios.

20.
Pain Med ; 15(11): 1965-74, 2014 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25339179

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to describe the characteristics of patients referred with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) diagnosis to a tertiary care pain center. METHOD: Descriptive chart review study of all patients referred by family physicians or community specialists as having CRPS (2006-2010). Data extraction included demographics, pain ratings, and diagnosis utilizing the Budapest CRPS criteria. RESULTS: The study population consisted of 54 subjects (male [M] =7, female [F] =47). Only 27.7% were classified as CRPS by the clinical expert. Four additional subjects carrying other diagnoses but found to have CRPS were added to the analysis. The non-CRPS group consisted of 39 subjects (M=8, F=31) and the CRPS group of 19 (M=2, F=17). CRPS patients were statistically significantly more likely to 1) have suffered a fracture; 2) report symptoms in each of the four symptom categories, as well as signs in three or four categories collectively; and 3) have allodynia/hyperalgesia alone or in combination (85/90%) as compared with the non-CRPS group (23/25%, respectively). The non-CRPS group was much more likely to report no symptoms or signs at all in the different symptom and sign categories. Of the 39 non-CRPS patients, 74% had other diagnosable entities (1/3 suffering from specific neuropathic pain conditions, e.g., radiculopathy, diabetic neuropathy, etc. and 2/3 from discreet musculoskeletal entities), while 18% were diagnosed with psychogenic pain disorders including conversion reaction associated with immobility or paralysis. DISCUSSION: Besides fulfilling the Budapest CRPS diagnostic criteria, the most important other factor for diagnosing CRPS is the exclusion of a neuropathic, musculoskeletal, or non-biomedical condition accounting for the presentation.


Assuntos
Síndromes da Dor Regional Complexa/diagnóstico , Síndromes da Dor Regional Complexa/epidemiologia , Adulto , Canadá , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Clínicas de Dor , Papel do Médico , Encaminhamento e Consulta , Centros de Atenção Terciária , Adulto Jovem
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