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Pain
in Aging and Pediatric Populations: Special Needs and Concerns
Pain is the number one complaint of older Americans, and one in
five older Americans takes a painkiller regularly. In 1998, the
American Geriatrics Society (AGS) issued guidelines* for the management
of pain in older people. The AGS panel addressed the incorporation
of several non-drug approaches in patients' treatment plans, including
exercise. AGS panel members recommend that, whenever possible,
patients use alternatives to aspirin, ibuprofen, and other NSAIDs
because of the drugs' side effects, including stomach irritation
and gastrointestinal bleeding. For older adults, acetaminophen
is the first-line treatment for mild-to-moderate pain, according
to the guidelines. More serious chronic pain conditions may require
opioid drugs (narcotics), including codeine or morphine, for relief
of pain.
Pain in younger patients also requires special attention, particularly
because young children are not always able to describe the degree
of pain they are experiencing. Although treating pain in pediatric
patients poses a special challenge to physicians and parents alike,
pediatric patients should never be undertreated. Recently, special
tools for measuring pain in children have been developed that,
when combined with cues used by parents, help physicians select
the most effective treatments.
Nonsteroidal agents, and especially acetaminophen, are most often
prescribed for control of pain in children. In the case of severe
pain or pain following surgery, acetaminophen may be combined
with codeine.
* Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society (1998; 46:635-651).
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This health article is made available by Dr. Rel Gray, MD a Pain Managemental Specialist. Pain managemental office at 206 E. Reynolds Drive # C2 Ruston, LA 71270. Dr. Rel Gray, MD is easily accessible from Union, Ouachita, Lincoln, Jackson, Claiborne, Bienville, Bernice, Downsville, Farmerville, Calhoun, Choudrant, Dubach, Grambling, Ruston, Simsboro, Eros, Hodge, Jonesboro, Quitman, Athens, Lisbon, Arcadia, Bienville, Gibsland.
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STATE
OF THE ART PAIN MANAGEMENTAL CARE
ONE PATIENT AT A TIME |
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