Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5577963 | The Journal of Pain | 2017 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Significant numbers of patients still suffer from significant acute pain, despite the advent of modern multimodal analgesic strategies. Mismanaged acute pain has a broad societal impact as significant numbers of patients may progress to suffer from chronic pain. An acute pain taxonomy provides a much-needed standardization of clinical diagnostic criteria, which benefits clinical care, research, education, and public policy. For the purposes of the present taxonomy, acute pain is considered to last up to seven days, with prolongation to 30Â days being common. The current understanding of acute pain mechanisms poorly differentiates between acute and chronic pain and is often insufficient to distinguish among many types of acute pain conditions. Given the usefulness of the AAPT multidimensional framework, the AAAPT undertook a similar approach to organizing various acute pain conditions.
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Authors
Michael L. Kent, Patrick J. Tighe, Inna Belfer, Timothy J. Brennan, Stephen Bruehl, Chad M. Brummett, Chester C. III, Asokumar Buvanendran, Robert I. Cohen, Paul Desjardins, David Edwards, Roger Fillingim, Jennifer Gewandter, Debra B. Gordon,