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Association of Bullous Pemphigoid With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Therapy in Patients With Cancer: A Systematic Review.

There is limited information on immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced bullous pemphigoid (ICI-BP) in patients with cancer, with most existing studies being case reports or small case series from a single institution. Prior review attempts have not approached the literature in a systematic manner and have focused only on ICI-BP secondary to anti-programmed cell death 1 (PD-1) or programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) therapy. The current knowledge base of all aspects of ICI-BP is limited.

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Food-Specific IgG4 Antibody-Guided Exclusion Diet Improves Conditions of Patients with Chronic Pain.

Chronic pain is related to gastrointestinal (GI) functions because food components affect inflammation and pain through their action on the GI immune and/or neural system and because many analgesics interact with the gut to alter its structure and function. Immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4) are food-specific antibodies resulting from exposure of the gut immune system to nutrients. High IgG4 levels have been found to be associated with inflammation.

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Anterior insular-nucleus accumbens pathway controls refeeding-induced analgesia under chronic inflammatory pain condition.

Feeding behaviors are closely associated with chronic pain in adult rodents. Our recent study revealed that 2 hours refeeding after 24 hours fasting (i.e., refeeding) attenuates pain behavior under chronic inflammatory pain conditions. However, while brain circuits mediating fasting-induced analgesia have been identified, the underlying mechanism of refeeding-induced analgesia is still elusive. Herein, we demonstrate that the neural activities in the nucleus accumbens shell (NAcS) and anterior insular cortex (aIC) were increased in a modified Complete Freund's Adjuvant (Lutz, #26)-induced chronic inflammatory pain condition, which was reversed by refeeding. We also found that refeeding reduced the enhanced excitability of aIC-NAcS projecting neurons in this CFA model. Besides, chemogenetic inhibition of aIC-NAcS neural circuit suppressed chronic pain behavior while activation of this circuit reversed refeeding-induced analgesia. Thus, the present study suggests that aIC-NAcS neural circuit mediates refeeding-induced analgesia, thereby serving as a potential therapeutic target to manage chronic pain.

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Central Nervous Activity during a Dot Probe Task with Facial Expressions in Fibromyalgia.

Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a chronic pain condition accompanied by affective symptoms and cognitive impairments. This study investigated central nervous correlates of attentional and emotional processing in FMS. Therefore, event-related potentials were recorded in 26 FMS patients and 26 healthy controls during a dot probe task, which required participants to decide which side of the screen an asterisk was displayed on; the asterisk was immediately preceded by a facial expression (anger, pain, happiness, neutral) on the left or right side. Comorbid depression was also assessed. In patients, N170 amplitude was smaller for anger and pain expressions than for happy expressions, and P2 was greater for pain expressions than for happy expressions. N170 and P2 were unaffected by emotional expressions in controls. LPC was smaller overall in patients than controls. Though reaction times were longer overall in patients than controls, no behavioral effects of emotional stimuli arose in these groups. In contrast, FMS patients with comorbid depression showed less attentional interference due to emotional expressions, and less difficulty disengaging from these stimuli than patients without depression. While the observations concerning N170 suggested facilitated encoding of facial features representing negative rather than positive emotions in FMS and more automatized processing of pain expressions, those for P2 indicated increased attentional resource allocation to pain-related information. Reduced LPC reflects nonspecific deficits in sustained attention in FMS, which is in line with the longer reaction times. Behavioral data suggest lower processing depth of emotional information in patients with comorbid depression.

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Cooled radiofrequency ablation of the genicular nerves for chronic pain due to osteoarthritis of the knee: a cost-effectiveness analysis compared with intra-articular hyaluronan injections based on trial data.

Effective symptom control in painful knee osteoarthritis (OA) may improve patient quality of life. In a randomised crossover trial (NCT03381248), COOLIEF* cooled radiofrequency ablation (CRFA) reduced pain and stiffness and improved physical function and quality of life compared with intra-articular hyaluronan (HA) injections. The present study aimed to establish the cost effectiveness of CRFA versus intra-articular HA injections for treating moderate-to-severe OA knee pain from a US Medicare perspective.

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The economic and personal burden of cluster headache: a controlled cross-sectional study.

Cluster headache is a less-prevalent primary headache disorder but is overrepresented with regards to use of health care and social services. More insight into the socioeconomic impact is required.

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Coping Expectancies and Disability across the New ICD-11 Chronic Pain Categories: A Large-Scale Registry Study.

Recently a new classification system for chronic pain was included in the 11 edition of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11). This study aims to investigate how expectancies of coping, i.e. pain catastrophizing and general self-efficacy, are associated with ICD-11 chronic pain categories in a large pain clinic population. Further, we investigate how coping expectancies are associated with pain-related disability, cross-sectionally and longitudinally across the novel pain classifications.

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The association between self-efficacy on function and pain outcomes among patients with chronic low back pain managed using the McKenzie approach: a prospective cohort study.

Self-efficacy is a determinant of function and pain outcomes in patients with chronic low back pain receiving physiotherapy. The McKenzie approach is an effective intervention for patients with back pain that may affect self-efficacy. Study aims were to determine if, among patients with back pain being managed by McKenzie-credentialed physiotherapists: intake self-efficacy is correlated with intake function and pain; intake self-efficacy is associated with changes in function and pain during treatment; self-efficacy improves during treatment; and improvements in self-efficacy during treatment are associated with improvements in function and pain at discharge.

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Relationship between Helicobacter pylori infection and white matter lesions in patients with migraine.

White matter lesions (WML) are more frequently observed in migraine patients than in the average population. Associations between Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection and different extraintestinal pathologies have been identified. Here, we aimed to investigate the association between H. pylori infection and WML in patients diagnosed with episodic migraine.

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Occipital headache evaluation and rates of migraine assessment, diagnosis, and treatment in patients receiving greater occipital nerve blocks in an academic pain clinic.

Diagnosis of patients with occipital headache can be challenging, as both primary and secondary causes must be considered. Our study assessed how often migraine is screened for, diagnosed, and treated in patients receiving greater occipital nerve blocks (GONBs) in a pain clinic.

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