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Article
Title Improvement in psychosocial outcomes in chronic pain patients receiving intrathecal morphine infusions 
Author Duse Genni, Davia Giorgio, White Paul F  
Article Information Abstract
Publication Anesthesia and Analgesia  BACKGROUND: When conventional multimodal analgesic therapy is
unsuccessful, more aggressive analgesic treatments are required for
patients with intractable chronic pain. Despite extensive clinical
experience with implanted morphine pumps, there is still controversy
regarding the psychosocial effects of this invasive analgesic
therapy. In this prospective study, we evaluated the impact of
intrathecal (IT) morphine infusions on pain perception and
psychosocial functionality. A secondary objective of this pilot study was
to assess the effect of IT morphine infusion on the patient's level
of functional activity. METHODS: Thirty patients with chronic
nonmalignant pain that failed to respond to multimodal analgesic
regimens were evaluated using the McGill Pain Questionnaire before
and at 3-, 12-, and 24-mo intervals after implantation of an IT
morphine infusion pump. At each clinic visit, the patient's level of
pain was assessed using an 11-point visual analog scale, with 0 = no
pain and 10 = worse pain imaginable. The mean initial morphine
infusion rate was 0.23 ± 0.14 mg/day (with a range from 0.09 to 0.75
mg/day) and was subsequently adjusted to maintain their pain score at a
value <50% of the initial value. Adverse side effects and
complications, as well as activity levels, were recorded at each
clinic visit. RESULTS: Both evaluative and affective components of the
pain assessment demonstrated a significant improvement over the 24-mo
study period. The evaluative component of the McGill Pain
Questionnaire improved 66%, the affective component 59%, and the
sensory component 32%. The average morphine infusion rate increased to
0.44 ± 0.29, 0.66 ± 0.39, and 0.80 ± 0.45 mg/day at the 3-, 12-, and
24-mo follow-up intervals (P < 0.05). The reduced level of chronic
pain leads to improved social, work, and family relationships and quality
of life. Among 13 patients of working age, 12 returned to work full time,
and among 17 retired patients, 14 had a reduced need for assistance.
CONCLUSIONS: IT infusion of morphine using an implantable pump
was helpful in improving psychosocial function in patients with
intractable pain that had failed to respond to standard multimodal
analgesic therapy.


Reference BUPP10096 
Year 2009 
Logged 22/02/2010 
Volume 109 
Part
Pages 1981-1986 
ISSN 0003-2999 
Keywords  
Comparison Drug  
Language English 

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