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- Rummans, Teresa A2
- Atayee, Rabia S1
- Barkin, Robert L1
- Bharucha, Adil E1
- Brooks, Marta J1
- Bruckenthal, Patricia1
- Burton, M Caroline1
- Camilleri, Michael1
- Campbell, J Keith1
- Capobianco, David J1
- Chandok, Natasha1
- Cheshire, William P1
- Clair, Andrew G1
- Clauw, Daniel J1
- Clayton, Anita H1
- Dawson, Nancy L1
- Deer, Timothy R1
- DeRogatis, Leonard R1
- Giraldi, Annamaria1
- Gold, Mark S1
- Goldenberg, Don L1
- Goldstein, Irwin1
- Hayek, Salim M1
- Kapoor, Sargam1
- Kim, Noel N1
Keyword
- Food and Drug Administration14
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- tricyclic antidepressant3
- 5-HT2
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- IBS2
- IBS-C2
- randomized controlled trial2
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- 5-HT41
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- 5-hydroxytryptamine 41
- 6-MAM1
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- 8-item Patient Health Questionnaire1
- Abbreviated New Drug Application1
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Opioids
14 Results
- Special article
Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid-Use Disorder
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 94Issue 10p2072–2086Published online: September 19, 2019- Tyler S. Oesterle
- Nuria J. Thusius
- Teresa A. Rummans
- Mark S. Gold
Cited in Scopus: 42The United States is in the midst of a national opioid epidemic. Physicians are encouraged both to prevent and treat opioid-use disorders (OUDs). Although there are 3 Food and Drug Administration-approved medications to treat OUD (methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone) and there is ample evidence of their efficacy, they are not used as often as they should. We provide a brief review of the 3 primary medications used in the treatment of OUD. Using data from available medical literature, we synthesize existing knowledge and provide a framework for how to determine the optimal approach for outpatient management of OUD with medication-assisted treatments. - Thematic review on gastroenterological diseases
Chronic Constipation
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 94Issue 11p2340–2357Published online: May 1, 2019- Adil E. Bharucha
- Arnold Wald
Cited in Scopus: 72Constipation is a common symptom that may be primary (idiopathic or functional) or associated with a number of disorders or medications. Although most constipation is self-managed by patients, 22% seek health care, mostly to primary care physicians (>50%) and gastroenterologists (14%), resulting in large expenditures for diagnostic testing and treatments. There is strong evidence that stimulant and osmotic laxatives, intestinal secretagogues, and peripherally restricted μ-opiate antagonists are effective and safe; the lattermost drugs are a major advance for managing opioid-induced constipation. - Thematic Review Series on Gastroenterological Diseases
Management Options for Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 93Issue 12p1858–1872Published in issue: December, 2018- Michael Camilleri
Cited in Scopus: 47Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is associated with diverse pathophysiologic mechanisms. These mechanisms include increased abnormal colonic motility or transit, intestinal or colorectal sensation, increased colonic bile acid concentration, and superficial colonic mucosal inflammation, as well as epithelial barrier dysfunction, neurohormonal up-regulation, and activation of secretory processes in the epithelial layer. Novel approaches to treatment include lifestyle modification, changes in diet, probiotics, and pharmacotherapy directed to the motility, sensation, and intraluminal milieu of patients with IBS. - Review
Advances in the Treatment of Sickle Cell Disease
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 93Issue 12p1810–1824Published online: November 7, 2018- Sargam Kapoor
- Jane A. Little
- Lydia H. Pecker
Cited in Scopus: 43Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a monogenic disorder that afflicts approximately 100,000 Americans and millions of people worldwide. It is characterized by hemolytic anemia, vaso-occlusive crises, relentless end-organ injury, and premature death. Currently, red blood cell transfusion and hydroxyurea are the major disease-modifying therapies available for SCD. Hematopoetic stem cell transplant is curative, but barriers to treatment are substantial and include a lack of suitable donors, immunologic transplant rejection, long-term adverse effects, prognostic uncertainty, and poor end-organ function, which is especially problematic for older patients. - Special article
How Good Intentions Contributed to Bad Outcomes: The Opioid Crisis
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 93Issue 3p344–350Published in issue: March, 2018- Teresa A. Rummans
- M. Caroline Burton
- Nancy L. Dawson
Cited in Scopus: 100The opioid crisis that exists today developed over the past 30 years. The reasons for this are many. Good intentions to improve pain and suffering led to increased prescribing of opioids, which contributed to misuse of opioids and even death. Following the publication of a short letter to the editor in a major medical journal declaring that those with chronic pain who received opioids rarely became addicted, prescriber attitude toward opioid use changed. Opioids were no longer reserved for treatment of acute pain or terminal pain conditions but now were used to treat any pain condition. - Review
Clinical Interpretation of Urine Drug Tests: What Clinicians Need to Know About Urine Drug Screens
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 92Issue 5p774–796Published online: March 18, 2017- Karen E. Moeller
- Julie C. Kissack
- Rabia S. Atayee
- Kelly C. Lee
Cited in Scopus: 85Urine drug testing is frequently used in clinical, employment, educational, and legal settings and misinterpretation of test results can result in significant adverse consequences for the individual who is being tested. Advances in drug testing technology combined with a rise in the number of novel misused substances present challenges to clinicians to appropriately interpret urine drug test results. Authors searched PubMed and Google Scholar to identify published literature written in English between 1946 and 2016, using urine drug test, screen, false-positive, false-negative, abuse, and individual drugs of abuse as key words. - Consensus recommendationsOpen Access
Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder: International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health (ISSWSH) Expert Consensus Panel Review
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 92Issue 1p114–128Published online: December 1, 2016- Irwin Goldstein
- Noel N. Kim
- Anita H. Clayton
- Leonard R. DeRogatis
- Annamaria Giraldi
- Sharon J. Parish
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 109The objective of the International Society for the Study of Women's Sexual Health expert consensus panel was to develop a concise, clinically relevant, evidence-based review of the epidemiology, physiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), a sexual dysfunction affecting approximately 10% of adult women. Etiologic factors include conditions or drugs that decrease brain dopamine, melanocortin, oxytocin, and norepinephrine levels and augment brain serotonin, endocannabinoid, prolactin, and opioid levels. - Review
Opioid Use in Fibromyalgia: A Cautionary Tale
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 91Issue 5p640–648Published online: March 11, 2016- Don L. Goldenberg
- Daniel J. Clauw
- Roy E. Palmer
- Andrew G. Clair
Cited in Scopus: 54Multiple pharmacotherapies are available for the treatment of fibromyalgia (FM), including opioid analgesics. We postulate that the mechanism of action of traditional opioids predicts their lack of efficacy in FM. Literature searches of the MEDLINE and Cochrane Library databases were conducted using the search term opioid AND fibromyalgia to identify relevant articles, with no date limitations set. Citation lists in returned articles and personal archives of references were also examined for additional relevant items, and articles were selected based on the expert opinions of the authors. - Symposium on pain medicine
Advanced Innovations for Pain
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 91Issue 2p246–258Published in issue: February, 2016- Tim J. Lamer
- Timothy R. Deer
- Salim M. Hayek
Cited in Scopus: 19Chronic pain represents one of the most important public health problems in terms of both the number of patients afflicted and health care costs. Most patients with chronic pain are treated with medications as the mainstay of therapy, and yet most medically treated patients continue to report ongoing pain. Additionally, adverse effects from pain medications represent a major challenge for clinicians and patients. Spinal cord stimulation and intrathecal drug delivery systems are well-established techniques that have been utilized for over 25 years. - Special articleOpen Access
Mitigating the Safety Risks of Drugs With a Focus on Opioids: Are Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies the Answer?
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 89Issue 12p1673–1684Published online: November 4, 2014- Marta J. Brooks
Cited in Scopus: 14Approximately 40% of all newly approved drugs are subject to safety restrictions inclusive of Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies (REMS), which were created with the US Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007. This law expanded Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authority to require REMS of manufacturers but left implementation to the FDA. As a result, the potential access to medications that are effective but not without safety concerns has improved, yet the converse is also true because access may be restricted due to REMS requirements (eg, physician or patient registration). - Review
Strategies to Reduce the Tampering and Subsequent Abuse of Long-acting Opioids: Potential Risks and Benefits of Formulations With Physical or Pharmacologic Deterrents to Tampering
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 87Issue 7p683–694Published in issue: July, 2012- Steven P. Stanos
- Patricia Bruckenthal
- Robert L. Barkin
Cited in Scopus: 55Increased prescribing of opioid analgesics for chronic noncancer pain may reflect acceptance that opioid benefits outweigh risks of adverse events for a broadening array of indications and patient populations; however, a parallel increase in the abuse, misuse, and diversion of prescription opioids has resulted. There is an urgent need to reduce opioid tampering and subsequent abuse without creating barriers to safe, effective analgesia. Similar to the “magic bullet” concept of antibiotic development (kill the bacteria without harming the patient), the idea behind reformulating opioid analgesics is to make them more difficult to tamper with and abuse by drug abusers but innocuous to the compliant patient. - REVIEW
Pain Management in the Cirrhotic Patient: The Clinical Challenge
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 85Issue 5p451–458Published in issue: May, 2010- Natasha Chandok
- Kymberly D.S. Watt
Cited in Scopus: 182Pain management in patients with cirrhosis is a difficult clinical challenge for health care professionals, and few prospective studies have offered an evidence-based approach. In patients with end-stage liver disease, adverse events from analgesics are frequent, potentially fatal, and often avoidable. Severe complications from analgesia in these patients include hepatic encephalopathy, hepatorenal syndrome, and gastrointestinal bleeding, which can result in substantial morbidity and even death. - SPECIAL ARTICLE
Development of Peripheral Opioid Antagonists: New Insights Into Opioid Effects
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 83Issue 10p1116–1130Published in issue: October, 2008- Jonathan Moss
- Carl E. Rosow
Cited in Scopus: 76The recent approval by the US Food and Drug Administration of 2 medications—methylnaltrexone and alvimopan—introduces a new class of therapeutic entities to clinicians. These peripherally acting μ-opioid receptor antagonists selectively reverse opioid actions mediated by receptors outside the central nervous system, while preserving centrally mediated analgesia. Methylnaltrexone, administered subcutaneously, has been approved in the United States, Europe, and Canada. In the United States, it is indicated for the treatment of opioid-induced constipation in patients with advanced illness (eg, cancer, AIDS) who are receiving palliative care, when response to laxative therapy has not been sufficient. - Subspecialty Clinics: Neurology
An Overview of the Diagnosis and Pharmacologie Treatment of Migraine
Mayo Clinic ProceedingsVol. 71Issue 11p1055–1066Published in issue: November, 1996- David J. Capobianco
- William P. Cheshire
- J. Keith Campbell
Cited in Scopus: 55Migraine, an episodic headache disorder, is one of the most common complaints encountered by primary-care physicians and neurologists. Nevertheless, it remains underdiagnosed and undertreated. Rational migraine treatment necessitates an accurate diagnosis, identification and removal of potential triggering factors, and, frequently, pharmacologie intervention. Effective management also includes establishing realistic expectations, patient reassurance, and education. The choice of medication (abortive, symptomatic) for an acute attack depends on such factors as the severity of the attack, presence or absence of vomiting, time of onset to peak pain, rate of bioavailability of the drug, comorbid medical conditions, and side-effect profile.