Background:The treatment of older adults with pain is complex and affected by age-related changes in pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Chronic pain encompasses a complex array of sensory-discriminatory, motivational-affective, and cognitive-evaluative components. Because of this complexity, both pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic approaches should be considered to treat pain.Aims:Given the large number of older persons with pain at the end of life and the few data about this issue, the objective of this article is to review the treatment of pain in this population.Patients and Methods:We searched The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE and LILACS from 1990 to 2011 and the references in retrieved manuscripts. The search terms were pain AND elderly AND end of life.Results:There are evidences of undertreatment among elderly people. The association of nonpharmacologic resources with the pharmacological treatment can help reduce the use of analgesics minimizing the side effects of long term medication. Pharmacological treatment is escalated in an orderly manner from non-opioid to weak opioid to strong opioid. Adjuvant drugs like anticonvulsants and antidepressants may be necessary.Conclusions:The sequential use of analgesics drugs and opioids are considered effective and relatively inexpensive for relieving pain, but no well designed specific studies in the elderly patient are available. There are not specific recommendations about the long-term use of complementary and alternative therapies and although their effectiveness remains unproven they should not be discouraged. Palliative sedation may be a valid palliative care option to relieve suffering in the imminently dying patient.
-Pseudoaneurysms of the extracranial vertebral artery are extremely rare due to their deep location and the anatomical protection of this artery. They can be caused by cervical traumas (firearm injuries, sports, hyperextension of the neck and iatrogeny). The authors report the case of a patient who developed a giant pseudoaneurysm of the extracranial vertebral artery after surgery for the removal of a tumor of the cerebellopontine angle in which surgical lesion of the artery occurred. Treatment was performed by endovascular approach. Literature is reviewed and comments are made on the physiopathogeny of the lesion and the different forms of treatment. KEY WORDS: aneurysm, vertebral artery aneurysm.endovascular treatmentPseudoaneurisma gigante da artéria vertebral extracraniana: relato de caso RESUMO -Os pseudoaneurismas da artéria vertebral extracraniana são extremamente raros pela localização profunda e proteção anatômica desta artéria. Podem ser ocasionados por traumas cervicais (ferimentos por armas de fogo, esportes, hiperextensão do pescoço e iãtrogenias). Os autores relatam o caso de um paciente que desenvolveu um pseudoaneurisma gigante da artéria vertebral extracraniana após cirurgia para retirada de tumor de ângulo ponto cerebelar em que ocorreu a lesão cirúrgica desta artéria e cujo tratamento foi endovascular. A literatura é revisada e são feitas considerações sobre a fisiopatogenia da lesão e as várias formas de tratamento. PALAVRAS-CHAVE: aneurisma, aneurisma da artéria vertebral, tratamento endovascularPseudoaneurysms of the extracranial vertebral artery are rare lesions 5 -36 since this artery is anatomically protected 20 . The initial description was made by Matas in 1893 32 , and there are few reports of iatrogenic pseudoaneurysms. The resolution of these lesions is rather controversial, always with a high degree of difficulty and various rates of morbidity and mortality 3 '
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a non-invasive brain imaging technique widely used in the evaluation of the brain function that provides images with high temporal and spatial resolution. Investigation of the supplementary motor area (SMA) function is critical in the pre-surgical evaluation of neurological patients, since marked individual differences and complex overlapping with adjacent cortical areas exist, and it is important to spare the SMA from lesions when adjacent cortical tissue is surgically removed. We used fMRI to assess the activity of SMA in six right-handed and six left-handed healthy volunteers when a task requiring silent repetition of a series of words was given. Brain activation areas in each of the subjects were localized according to the standard Talairach coordinate space, and the individual voxels for each map were compared after 3D sagittal images were created and SMA was delimited. Quantitative analysis of hemispheric and bilateral SMA activation was described as mean ± standard deviation of hot points/total points. The results show that the language task induced bilateral SMA activation. Left SMA activation was significantly higher than right SMA activation in both right-handed and left-handed subjects.
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