Measurement of chronic pain in companion animals: Discussions from the Pain in Animals Workshop (PAW) 2017

The Veterinary Journal
B Duncan X LascellesM Sharkey

Abstract

In the face of increasing recognition and interest in treating chronic pain in companion animals, we struggle with a lack of therapeutic options. A significant barrier to the development of new therapeutics, or the critical evaluation of current therapies, is our inability to accurately measure chronic pain and its impact on companion animals. Over the last 20 years, much progress has been made in developing methods to measure chronic pain via subjective and objective methods - particularly in owner assessment tools and measurements of limb use and activity. Most work has been focused on chronic joint pain conditions, but there has been relatively little work in other areas of chronic pain, such as neuropathic and cancer pain. Although progress has been made, there is a considerable interest in improving our assessment of chronic pain, as evidenced by the multiple disciplines across industry, academia, and clinical practice from the veterinary and human medical fields that participated in the Pain in Animals Workshop held at the National Institutes of Health in 2017. This review is one product of that meeting and summarizes the current state of knowledge surrounding the measurement of chronic pain (musculoskeletal, cancer, neur...Continue Reading

Citations

Dec 27, 2019·Radiation Research·Michael W NolanB Duncan X Lascelles
Jul 1, 2020·Animals : an Open Access Journal From MDPI·Petra ČernáDanièlle A Gunn-Moore
Nov 19, 2020·Animals : an Open Access Journal From MDPI·Elena NavarroXavier Manteca
Jan 1, 2021·Frontiers in Pharmacology·Jorge B Pineda-FariasNicole N Scheff
Dec 19, 2020·Scientific Reports·Hope J WoodsMargaret E Gruen
May 19, 2021·Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery·Masataka EnomotoMargaret E Gruen
Nov 2, 2021·Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine·Margaret E GruenB Duncan X Lascelles

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