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Clinical Interventions in Aging
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Pharmacological pain management in the elderly patient
Expert Opinion
(3721) Views (557) Full article downloads
Author: Gary McCleane
Published Date January 2007
Volume 2007:2(4) Pages 637 - 643
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S1939
Gary McCleane
Rampark Pain Centre, Lurgan, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Abstract: With the increasing number of elderly patients the issue of pain management for older people is of increasing relevance. The alterations with aging of the neurobiology of pain have impacts of pain threshold, tolerance and treatment. In this review the available evidence from animal and human experimentation is discussed to highlight the differences between young and older subjects along with consideration of how these changes have practical effect on drug treatment of pain. Cognitive impairment, physical disability and social isolation can also impact on the accessibility of treatment and have to be considered along with the biological changes with ageing. Conventional pain therapies, while verified in younger adults cannot be automatically applied to the elderly without consideration of all these factors and in no other group of patients is a holistic approach to treatment more important.
Keywords: pain, analgesia, pain threshold, pain tolerance
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