There is substantial variability in the clinical course of people presenting with acute low back pain (LBP) – pain that lasts for up to 3 months. The majority of patients with acute LBP recover from ...
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Acute low back pain: Can screening predict recovery?
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Seeing your pain site – continued
Some time ago we reported here about the effect of visual induced analgesia on experimental pain in chronic back pain patients. In short to remind you: we used real-time video feedback; a video camera filmed ...
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Who’s goal is it anyway?
Goal setting is well accepted amongst healthcare workers and is included in guidelines in the management of chronic low back pain (CLBP). Most self-management programs, aimed at motivating a person to change behaviour to achieve ...
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Pain neuroscience education: Effects on pain and disability in chronic low back pain
Pain neuroscience education (PNE) has changed our practice as clinicians, our knowledge and the way we interact with patients. But does it change short-term or long-term pain and disability in patients with persistent low back ...
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Pain 101—Neuropathic Pain: One Size Does Not Fit All
Pain researchers increasingly recognize that people with pain from nerve injury are not all alike; patient stratification could be the path to better diagnosis and treatment.