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Guidelines for the understanding and management of pain in chronic pancreatitis.

Pancreatology : official journal of the International Association of Pancreatology (IAP) ... [et al.]
January 1, 2017
Asbjørn M Drewes et al. (19 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Extracted Claims (10)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
abstinence from alcohol and smoking
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
should be strongly advised
#1
pancreatic enzyme therapy
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
may be helpful
#2
antioxidants
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
may be helpful
#3
endoscopic treatment
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis with evidence of ductal obstruction
-
can be used
#4
extracorporeal shock wave lithothripsy
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis with evidence of ductal obstruction
-
may be combined
#5
behavioral interventions
decrease
chronic pain management
patients with chronic pancreatitis particularly when psychological impact is experienced
-
should be part of the multidisciplinary approach
#6
surgery
decrease
pain relief
patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
should be considered early
#7
surgery
increase
long-term effects
patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
high success rates have been reported
#8
neurolytical interventions
decrease
pain relief
difficult patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
can be considered
#9
neuromodulation
decrease
pain relief
difficult patients with chronic pancreatitis
-
can be considered
#10
Abstract

Abdominal pain is the foremost complication of chronic pancreatitis (CP). Pain can be related to recurrent or chronic inflammation, local complications or neurogenic mechanisms with corresponding changes in the nervous systems. Both pain intensity and the frequency of pain attacks have been shown to reduce quality of life in patients with CP. Assessment of pain follows the guidelines for other types of chronic pain, where the multidimensional nature of symptom presentation is taken into consideration. Quantitative sensory testing may be used to characterize pain, but is currently used in a research setting in advanced laboratories. For pain relief, current guidelines recommend a simple stepwise escalation of analgesic drugs with increasing potency until pain relief is obtained. Abstinence from alcohol and smoking should be strongly advised. Pancreatic enzyme therapy and antioxidants may be helpful as initial treatment. Endoscopic treatment can be used in patients with evidence of ductal obstruction and may be combined with extracorporeal shock wave lithothripsy. The best candidates are those with distal obstruction of the main pancreatic duct and in early stage of disease. Behavioral interventions should be part of the multidisciplinary approach to chronic pain management particularly when psychological impact is experienced. Surgery should be considered early and after a maximum of five endoscopic interventions. The type of surgery depends on morphological changes of the pancreas. Long-term effects are variable, but high success rates have been reported in open studies and when compared with endoscopic treatment. Finally, neurolytical interventions and neuromodulation can be considered in difficult patients.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansPainPain ManagementPain MeasurementPancreatitis, ChronicPractice Guidelines as Topic
Study Links
Citation Metrics
Total Citations185
Citations/Year23.1
Relative Citation Ratio9.69
NIH Percentile97.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
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