Does Emotional Recovery after Auto Accidents Influence Chronic Pain?
Presented at the 2014 American Pain Society Meeting, research led by Dr. Samuel McLean at UNC at Chapel Hill showed there are several personal predictors of better and poorer outcomes after motor vehicle collisions. Better psychological assessment and preventative interventions could reduce the transition of acute pain into long-term disability. What are those predictors? Read more...
Glia - What Does It Do in the Brain?
(Part 1 of 3-part series) Learning to live life with a chronic pain illness is not for the faint of heart. It takes personal fortitude and determination along with an inquisitive mind and self-empowerment. And knowledge about the chronic pain illness is the first and foremost element in helping a person regain control of his or her life. Research shows the relevance of changes in brain chemistry and glia cells in the spinal cord affecting symptom severity and the sickness response (a nausea that overcomes a person who hurts so much they are physically ill). Read more...
Studies for New Fibromyalgia Medication
A potential new fibromyalgia medication is in development by Premier Biomedical, Inc., a young pharmaceutical company that is creative and progressive in its scientific thinking and investigations. (Click on logo for brief video.) Read more...
Targiniq ER Approved by the FDA for Round the Clock Pain Relief
In a press release issued on Thursday, July 24, 2014, the Food & Drug Administration announced the approval of Targiniq ER, a new combination pain pill from Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin, designed to discourage abuse by painkiller addicts. FDA regulators approved the drug for daily, round-the-clock pain that does not respond to other medications.
Targiniq is an extended release formulation tablet that combines oxydodone - the active ingredient in OxyContin - with the drug Naloxone. If abusers crush the tablets for snorting or injecting, Naloxone blocks the euphoric effects of oxycodone, making the drug more difficult to abuse. Naloxone is currently used to reverse the overdose effects of opioids which are highly addictive pain killing drugs, including morphine, methadone, codeine and others.
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