Cancer Pain ManagementDeborah B. McGuire, Connie Henke Yarbro Grune & Stratton, 1987 - 286 pages |
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Page 13
... considered the possibility of pain as an indicator of progressive disease . Spiegel and Bloom48 also assessed the meaning of pain in their sample of patients with metastatic breast cancer . The belief that pain was indicative of ...
... considered the possibility of pain as an indicator of progressive disease . Spiegel and Bloom48 also assessed the meaning of pain in their sample of patients with metastatic breast cancer . The belief that pain was indicative of ...
Page 166
... considered to possess comparable relative analgesic potential may differ significantly in this regard in an individual patient , many times necessitating a " trial and error " situation until the most appropriate agent is found . The ...
... considered to possess comparable relative analgesic potential may differ significantly in this regard in an individual patient , many times necessitating a " trial and error " situation until the most appropriate agent is found . The ...
Page 224
... considered for neurosurgical intervention . The various neurosurgical therapeutic interventions for the control of cancer pain must be carefully matched to the patients to be treated . In addition to having failed the more conservative ...
... considered for neurosurgical intervention . The various neurosurgical therapeutic interventions for the control of cancer pain must be carefully matched to the patients to be treated . In addition to having failed the more conservative ...
Contents
Prevalence and Profile of Pain | 21 |
Painful Complications of Cancer Diagnosis | 47 |
Issues in Cancer Pain Management | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieved activity acute addition administration agents analgesia analgesic anxiety approach appropriate aspects aspirin assessment associated attitudes behavioral cancer pain cancer patients cancer-related pain cause changes chronic pain Clin clinical compared complete component considered continuous dependence depression described developed direct discussed disease dose drugs effects evaluation example experience experienced factors frequently function given important increased indicated individual infusion initial intensity interventions involved knowledge less major measures medication methods morphine narcotic narcotic analgesics nerve nurses observed occur oncology oral pain control pain management pain relief pain syndromes percent possible postoperative potential present problem procedures produce progressive psychological radiation received recent relatively relaxation reported respiratory response result scale scores sensory severe side effects significant specific symptoms Table techniques terminal therapy tolerance treated treatment tumor usually York