buprenorphine and Peripheral-Nerve-Injuries

buprenorphine has been researched along with Peripheral-Nerve-Injuries* in 3 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for buprenorphine and Peripheral-Nerve-Injuries

ArticleYear
Dose-response relationship of opioids in nociceptive and neuropathic postoperative pain.
    Pain, 1998, Volume: 74, Issue:2-3

    The treatment of neuropathic pain with opioid analgesics is a matter of controversy among clinicians and clinician scientists. Although neuropathic pain is usually believed to be only slightly responsive to opioids, several studies show that satisfactory analgesia can be obtained if adequate doses are administered. In the present study, we tested the effectiveness of buprenorphine in 21 patients soon after thoracic surgery (nociceptive postoperative pain) and 1 month after surgery in the same 21 patients who developed postthoracotomy neuropathic pain with a burning, electrical and shooting quality. According to a double-blind randomized study, the analgesic dose (AD) of buprenorphine needed to reduce the long-term neuropathic pain by 50% (AD50) was calculated and compared to the AD50 in the immediate postoperative period. We found that long-term neuropathic pain could be adequately reduced by buprenorphine. However, the AD50 in neuropathic pain was significantly higher relative to the AD50 in the short-term postoperative pain, indicating a lower responsiveness of neuropathic pain to opioids. We also found a strict relationship between the short-term and long-term AD50, characterized by a saturating effect. In fact, if the AD50 soon after surgery was low, the AD50 increase in the long-term neuropathic pain was threefold. By contrast, if the AD50 soon after surgery was high, the AD50 in neuropathic pain was only slightly increased. This suggests that, though neuropathic pain is indeed less sensitive to opioids, in some neuropathic patients a large amount of opioid resistance is already present in other painful conditions.

    Topics: Aged; Analgesics, Opioid; Buprenorphine; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Double-Blind Method; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Nociceptors; Pain Threshold; Pain, Postoperative; Peripheral Nerve Injuries; Skin; Thoracotomy; Time Factors

1998

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for buprenorphine and Peripheral-Nerve-Injuries

ArticleYear
New insights into the analgesic properties of the XCL1/XCR1 and XCL1/ITGA9 axes modulation under neuropathic pain conditions - evidence from animal studies.
    Frontiers in immunology, 2022, Volume: 13

    Topics: Analgesics; Analgesics, Opioid; Animals; Animals, Laboratory; Buprenorphine; Chemokines, C; Integrins; Mice; Morphine; Neuralgia; Peripheral Nerve Injuries; Receptors, Chemokine

2022
The Incidence of Peripheral Nerve Injury After Multimodal Perineural Anesthesia/Analgesia Does Not Appear to Differ from That Following Single-Drug Nerve Blocks (2011-2014).
    Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.), 2017, 04-01, Volume: 18, Issue:4

    Topics: Amides; Analgesics; Anesthetics, Local; Bupivacaine; Buprenorphine; Dexamethasone; Drug Therapy, Combination; Humans; Incidence; Midazolam; Nerve Block; Peripheral Nerve Injuries; Retrospective Studies; Ropivacaine

2017