MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
RSD Support From Ones Who Care[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome ....................... �?/A>  
  All Messages ................. �?/A>  
  General  
  - Who Am I  
  Rules-Signed  
  Permissions  
  Pain Care "Bill of RIghts"  
  A Letter to Normals  
  I Resolve...  
  Lifestyle Adjustment  
  Lifestyle Adjustment 2  
  People in PAIN  
  KJ's Kids  
  School  
  KJsJokes  
  Our Pets  
  Award Evaluation  
  ï¿½?Ask the Expert  
  Â§ Stress Relief  
  ï¿½? Coping Ideas  
  ï¿½? Closer Look  
  ï¿½? Diabetes  
  ï¿½? In the News  
  ï¿½?Medicine  
  ï¿½? Research  
  ï¿½?Fibromyalgia  
  ï¿½?DDD-Arthritis  
  ï¿½?Lupus  
  ï¿½?Migraine  
  ï¿½?MS  
  ï¿½?RSD/CRPS  
  ï¿½?HCV  
  ï¿½? Depression  
  â‰¡Â·Surf Safe  
  Basic Comp TUT's  
  The Mind's Eye  
  *¤* Appetizers  
  *¤* Beverages  
  *¤* Breads  
  *¤* Breakfasts  
  *¤* Candy  
  *¤* Desserts  
  *¤* Ethnic  
  *¤* Holiday  
  *¤* Lo-Cal  
  *¤* Lunches  
  *¤* Main Dishes  
  *¤* No-Bake  
  *¤* Salads  
  *¤* Sauces  
  *¤* Side Dishes  
  *¤* Soup  
  ï¿½?Grafitti Wall  
  AromaTherapy  
  Myths & Misconceptions ..  
  Crisis Information .......... �?/A>  
  
  
  Tools  
 
�? Research : Chronic Pain Can Drive You to Distraction
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSummerlove113  (Original Message)Sent: 6/29/2007 5:22 AM
Source: University of Alberta     Released: Fri 18-May-2007, 19:00 ET 

Chronic Pain Can Drive You to Distraction

Libraries
Medical News
  Keywords
PAIN, CHRONIC, CHRONIC PAIN, MEMORY, CONCENTRATION, MEMORY TRACE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY PAIN CENTRE, ANALGESIA, ANALGESIC

Contact Information

Available for logged-in reporters only

Description

In a study conducted at the University of Alberta’s Multidisciplinary Pain Centre in Edmonton, two-thirds of participants with chronic pain showed significant disruption of attention and memory when tested. Drs. Bruce Dick and Saifudin Rashiq seem to have zeroed in on one of the cognitive mechanisms affected by chronic pain: the maintenance of the memory trace required to hold information for processing.

Newswise �?Anyone who has experienced chronic pain knows that it affects the ability to work, sleep and perform other activities essential to leading a full life. Now researchers at the University of Alberta have confirmed that chronic pain doesn’t just cause physical discomfort; it can impair your memory and your concentration.

In a study recently conducted at the university’s Multidisciplinary Pain Centre in Edmonton, Canada, two-thirds of participants with chronic pain showed significant disruption of attention and memory when tested.

After studying 24 patients, Drs. Bruce D. Dick and Saifudin Rashiq seem to have zeroed in on one of the cognitive mechanisms affected by chronic pain. Their findings, published in the latest issue of Anesthesia and Analgesia, suggest that pain may disrupt the maintenance of the memory trace that is required to hold information for processing and retain it for storage in longer-term memory stores. In other words, chronic pain can, quite literally, drive people to distraction.

Participants in the study—all of whom had pain lasting six months or longer—were given computerized tests of working memory and a neuropsychological test of attention on separate “pain�?and “less pain�?days.

On the “less pain�?day, participants were tested after receiving a pain-reducing procedure as part of their ongoing treatment at the Centre. On the “pain�?day, participants were tested without having received a pain-reducing procedure, when their pain was reported to be at a high level. Sixteen participants—a startling 67 per cent—showed clinical impairment due to pain on their pain testing day. The remaining eight participants, or 33 per cent, showed no clinical impairment due to pain.

The sample of individuals included in the study may be small, but the statistically significant findings are “robust�? Dick and Rashiq said.

“Prevalence studies indicate that as much as 44 per cent of the population—in Canada as well as in the U.S. and Europe—experience pain on a regular basis, and that in approximately one-quarter of this group the pain is severe�? said Dick. The cost of chronic pain to society is great, and Dick and Rashiq argue that the matter needs to be recognized as a public health priority.

Source: University of Alberta, Office of Public Affairs


© 2007 Newswise.  All Rights Reserved.

 



First  Previous  2 of 2  Next  Last 
Reply
 Message 2 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameA_Normalee_TSent: 7/26/2007 4:10 AM
Good Information to Review!
 
Tagged an informative article!
 
The Management Team!