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1.
Anaesthesia, Pain and Intensive Care. 2017; 21 (3): 370-373
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-189439

ABSTRACT

Neuropathic pain is a common cause of chronic pelvic pain. Its resistance to treatment, often challenges patient's cooperation to prolonged and sometimes interventional schemes and necessitates constant search for alternative or complementary interventions. In this case series, one elderly male patient who presented with persistent chronic pelvic pain after multiple abdominal operations did not respond to conventional medical treatment and acupuncture and requested discontinuation of treatment. Electroacupuncture was applied as a last resort therapy and proved very effective in reducing pelvic pain; it permitted significant reduction in anti-depressant medication doses. A second case study refers to a young female patient who developed chronic pelvic pain after giving birth to a child. Various treatments proved unsuccessful in alleviation her pain. She eventually responded to electro-acupuncture at multiple trigger points in the abdominal wall

2.
Anaesthesia, Pain and Intensive Care. 2017; 21 (2): 255-259
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-189154

ABSTRACT

Calcific tendonitis is a common painful syndrome of the shoulder region that affects mainly women of 40 to 60 years of age. It usually remains asympatomatic at the early stages and in some patients, but produces severe and sometimes protracted pain during the resolution phase. Complex regional pain syndrome [CRPS] and the "frozen shoulder" syndrome are the main entities that need to be considered in the differential diagnosis of the syndrome. Although there are specific criteria to diagnose any of these painful syndromes but occasionally some of these may co-exist and make diagnosis and appropriate treatment quite a challenging task. We present a case with bilateral calcific tendonitis of the shoulders, complicated with causalgia and reflex sympathetic dystrophy [RSD] syndrome that make the two arms of the CRPS. After failure of the conservative treatment [e.g., non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medications, opioids, physiotherapy, intra-articular steroids] to treat both pain and causalgia, we applied repetitive trials of electroacupuncture together with auricular acupuncture and one trial of intravenous regional anesthesia. The patient gradually responded to treatment and regained normal, painless mobility of the shoulders. She returned to normal life activities after five years of debilitating pain in both of her shoulders. We believe that electroacupuncture deserves further clinical research in painful musculoskeletal disorders like calcific tendonitis


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Middle Aged , Tendinopathy/therapy , Calcinosis , Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/therapy , Syndrome , Complex Regional Pain Syndromes , Causalgia , Electroacupuncture , Acupuncture, Ear , Anesthesia, Conduction , Shoulder
3.
Anaesthesia, Pain and Intensive Care. 2016; 20 (4): 484-487
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-185622

ABSTRACT

Neuropathic pain is a common cause of chronic pelvic pain. Its resistance to treatment, often challenges patient's cooperation to prolonged and sometimes interventional schemes and necessitates constant search for alternative or complementary interventions. In this case series, one elderly male patient who presented with persistent chronic pelvic pain after multiple abdominal operations did not respond to conventional medical treatment and acupuncture and requested discontinuation of treatment. Electro-acupuncture was applied as a last resort therapy and proved very effective in reducing pelvic pain; it permitted significant reduction in anti-depressant medication doses. A second case study refers to a young female patient who developed chronic pelvic pain after giving birth to a child. Various treatments proved unsuccessful in alleviation her pain. She eventually responded to electro-acupuncture at multiple trigger points in the abdominal wall

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