Vaccinations and therapeutics have been developed for COVID-19, but vaccine uptake varies markedly among countries. Public health responses have also varied, in particular, with lockdown efforts and school closing. All over the world, the pandemic exposed healthcare and economic weaknesses. COVID-19 exacerbated mental health issues by exposing the population to prolonged periods of fear, anxiety, financial stress, psychological uncertainties, and sometimes isolation from even family and friends. Chronic pain patients have been disproportionately affected. The pandemic-associated stresses may have exacerbated their already painful symptoms while at the same time interrupting their access to care. The ramifications of the COVID-19 post-viral syndrome ("long are not yet known. COVID-19 viral infection has been associated with neuropathic pain symptoms. Tele-triage and telehealth applications can help manage chronic pain patients in the COVID-19 era, but many interventional procedures, injections, or other treatments have been delayed. The role of palliative care for patients with terminal cases of infection must be re-examined. Palliative care is a relatively new medical specialty and allows terminally ill patients to die in as much comfort and peace as can be afforded to them. More training in palliative care for all clinicians is urgently needed. COVID-19 exposed much that is wrong or weak or inadequate in our healthcare systems, but it also allowed us to embrace new technologies and develop better systems to manage the challenge of a pandemic.
The fundamental approach to cancer patients with pain is to identify the pain sites, and describe, quantify, and categorize the pain by type at each site. There are many validated tools to serve the clinician in these efforts, particularly for pain assessment. Multimechanistic pain syndromes are common in cancer patients. Cancer patients may experience nociceptive pain. They may also experience neuropathic pain due to chemotherapy-induced or cancer-related nerve damage. Analgesic choices must be guided by the pain mechanisms, nature, and severity of the pain, comorbid conditions, and patient characteristics. Long-acting opioid analgesics or fixed-clock dosing can eliminate end-of-dose analgesic gaps. The potential for opioid abuse is an important public health challenge but one that should not undermine the appropriate treatment of moderate to severe cancer pain. Abuse-deterrent opioid formulations can be useful. Care is needed for special populations of cancer patients dealing with pain, such as geriatric, pediatric, or obese patients. While morphine has long been the gold standard of oral opioid products, recent clinical trials suggest that oral hydrocodone and oral oxycodone may offer advantages over oral morphine. Patient adherence is crucial for adequate analgesia and patient education can promote adherence and manage expectations.
The future of pain medicine is marked by many questions. What can other nations around the world learn from the opioid crisis that is still affecting the United States? The American opioid experience was mischaracterized and wrongly described, and its causes were misdiagnosed from the outset, leading to its mismanagement and the abandonment of many chronic pain patients to their suffering. There are a few new drugs in the analgesic armamentarium. What new targets do we have in pain medicine? There are many breakthroughs, discoveries, and potential new targets that could add to our analgesic prescribing choices. These include sigma receptors, d-amino acid oxidase, endoplasmic reticulum stress receptors, histone deacetylase, and others. Neuromodulation had been used with varying degrees of success for years, but with a simplistic approach based on the gate theory of pain. Despite our familiarity with neuromodulation and spinal cord stimulators, neuromodulation research indicates that the activation of glial cells may activate the immune system and enhance analgesia. Neuromodulation studies have concentrated on how electricity affects neuronal activity rather than how electrical activity could reduce pain. There are still more frontiers in our battle against pain and some promising avenues for treatments. This narrative review will try to summarize what can be done from the perspective of recent technological and pharmacological developments.
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