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Pain management
Pain management is the discipline concerned with the relief of pain. Acute pain, such as occurs with trauma, often has a reversible cause and may require only transient measures and correction of the underlying problem. In contrast, chronic pain often results from conditions that are difficult to diagnose and treat, and that may take a long time to reverse. Some examples include cancer, neuropathy, and referred pain. In such situations, the pain itself is frequently managed separately from the underlying condition of which it is a symptom.
Pain management generally benefits from a multidisciplinaryapproach that includes pharmacologicmeasures (such as analgesicsand narcotics), non-pharmacologic measures (such as interventional procedures, physical therapy, ice and heat), and psychologicalmeasures (such as biofeedbackand cognitive therapy).
Pain management practitioners come from all fields of medicine. Most often, pain fellowship trained physicians are anesthesiologists, neurologists, physiatristsor psychiatrists. Some practitioners focus more on the pharmacologic management of the patient, while others are very proficient at the interventional management of pain. Interventional procedures include: epidural steroid injections, facet joint injections, neurolytic blocks, spinal cord stimulators and intrathecal drug delivery system implants, etc.
Categories: Medicine stubs| Pain| Anesthesia
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain+management Wikipedia article Pain management.
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