9321. Physiotherapy methods of relieving pain.
Management of pain in the person with arthritis requires interdisciplinary team work with the patient being the final manager. It is important that any health care provider perceive the patient as a person who happens to have arthritis--not as 'an "arthritic".' Defining a person by one's disease process is dehumanizing. The patient has the same aspirations as anyone who is ablebodied--to be free from disease. While the patient may know that a cure is not imminent, there is still the hope for one. Therefore, as the patient comes for physiotherapy, there may be a hidden wish that the moist packs, TENS, or therapeutic pool will be curative. It is important that the patient understand that no equipment in the physiotherapy department has curative powers. This will help avoid unnecessary dependency behaviours on the part of the patient. Careful instruction and supervision of the patient by the physiotherapist, in concert with reinforcement from the physician, can prepare the patient to apply heat, cold, or a variety of treatments at home. Although the patient is given the responsibility for this part of his care, periodic follow-up and reassessment should be completed to determine changes in his physiological, psychological, and functional status. Physiotherapists who have a clear understanding of the physical treatment of pain associated with the rheumatic diseases can be a valuable asset to medical care.
9323. The place of the pain clinic.
Chronic pain is a debilitating and degrading condition. Its aetiology is largely multifactorial, and only proper appreciation of the various factors which can combine to produce the patient's misery will allow appropriate therapies. If the mechanisms of chronic pain were better taught and the therapies available were better used by medical practitioners, then the standard of alleviation of pain would increase greatly. There is an urgent need for greatly improved facilities for treating chronic pain by multidisciplinary groups in specialized clinics, a fact which has been realized for over 30 years. However, in spite of this there is a great delay in the setting up of such units. There is also an urgent need for proper training of doctors in pain relief, and a need for a much larger amount of money to be spent on research into the causes and treatment of human pain. It is disturbing to me that so much money goes on research into possible cures of malignant disease in the future, which is all very well, but which does not help the sufferer from severe pain at the present time; whereas these poor unfortunates, dying with their misery unassuaged, must suffer unnecessarily because of lack of information amongst physicians, and lack of proper facilities for treatment. Likewise, our own unit and many others have extremely long waiting lists, making even more difficult the treatment of an already complex problem. In spite of this, more than 50% of patients who attend multidisciplinary pain clinics obtain long-term benefit from their therapy. The fact that facilities do not exist for many sufferers is not only disgraceful, but also very expensive both from social security payments and from inappropriate use of health care facilities as these patients wander from clinic to clinic in search of a cure which is not available. Chronic pain should be recognized for what it is--a severe and debilitating condition--and proper steps should be taken to provide the treatment within the health service for its alleviation.
9326. [Immunologic response to Yersinia antigens in patients with various rheumatic diseases].
作者: M Zaremba.;B Karpińska.;A Poniecki.;J Bolińska.;A Kacprzak-Wiater.;E Czeczuga-Semeniuk.
来源: Reumatologia. 1984年22卷1期35-45页 9327. [Humoral and cellular immunity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis].9328. [Hydroxyproline in synovial exudates and serum of patients with rheumatoid arthritis].9329. [Seronegative rheumatoid arthritis].9330. [Arthritis in Shigella and Salmonella infections].9331. [Treatment of rheumatoid arthritis with ampicillin: results of long-term observations indicating the possibility of inhibiting the progression of bone damage].9332. [Satisfactory but short-lasting effects of the treatment of coxarthrosis with injections of Impletol Depot Bayer].9333. [Scleromalacia perforans in a patient with rheumatoid arthritis].9334. [Sjögren's syndrome - observation of 45 cases].9335. [Reiter's disease - clinical observation of 35 cases].9336. [Topographical differences in the content and composition of glycosaminoglycans of patellar cartilage].9337. [Pathomorphological changes in the internal organs and causes of death in cases of rheumatoid arthritis in adults].9338. [Posterior capsulotomy as a method of treatment of flexion contracture of the knee joint in rheumatoid arthritis].9339. [Review of the methods for studying maximal muscle power].9340. [Fasciitis eosinophilica in the light of observed cases]. |