"I did not expect the doctor to treat a ghost": a systematic review of published reports regarding chronic postamputation pain in British First World War veterans.

IF 3.4 Q2 NEUROSCIENCES Pain Reports Pub Date : 2023-10-17 eCollection Date: 2023-12-01 DOI:10.1097/PR9.0000000000001094
Sarah Dixon Smith, Dominic Aldington, George Hay, Alexander Kumar, Peter Le Feuvre, Andrew Moore, Nadia Soliman, Kimberley E Wever, Andrew S C Rice
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Abstract

Limb trauma remains the most prevalent survivable major combat injury. In the First World War, more than 700,000 British soldiers received limb wounds and more than 41,000 underwent an amputation, creating one of the largest amputee cohorts in history. Postamputation pain affects up to 85% of military amputees, suggesting that up to 33,000 British First World War veterans potentially reported postamputation pain. This qualitative systematic review explores the professional medical conversation around clinical management of chronic postamputation pain in this patient cohort, its development over the 20th century, and how this information was disseminated among medical professionals. We searched The Lancet and British Medical Journal archives (1914-1985) for reports referring to postamputation pain, its prevalence, mechanisms, descriptors, or clinical management. Participants were First World War veterans with a limb amputation, excluding civilians and veterans of all other conflicts. The search identified 9809 potentially relevant texts, of which 101 met the inclusion criteria. Reports emerged as early as 1914 and the discussion continued over the next 4 decades. Unexpected findings included early advocacy of multidisciplinary pain management, concerns over addiction, and the effect of chronic pain on mental health emerging decades earlier than previously thought. Chronic postamputation pain is still a significant issue for military rehabilitation. Similarities between injury patterns in the First World War and recent Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts mean that these historical aspects remain relevant to today's military personnel, clinicians, researchers, and policymakers.

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“我没想到医生会治鬼”:这是对已发表的关于英国一战老兵截肢后慢性疼痛的报告的系统综述。
肢体创伤仍然是最常见的可存活的主要战斗损伤。在第一次世界大战中,70多万英国士兵四肢受伤,41000多人接受了截肢手术,成为历史上最大的截肢者群体之一。截肢后疼痛影响了高达85%的军事截肢者,这表明多达33000名英国第一次世界大战老兵可能报告了截肢后疼痛。这篇定性系统综述探讨了这一患者群体中围绕慢性截肢后疼痛临床管理的专业医学对话,其在20世纪的发展,以及这些信息是如何在医学专业人员中传播的。我们在《柳叶刀》和《英国医学杂志》档案(1914-1985)中搜索了有关截肢后疼痛、其患病率、机制、描述符或临床管理的报告。参与者是截肢的第一次世界大战老兵,不包括平民和所有其他冲突的老兵。搜索发现9809篇潜在相关文本,其中101篇符合入选标准。早在1914年就有报道,在接下来的40年里,讨论仍在继续。意外的发现包括早期倡导多学科疼痛管理、对成瘾的担忧,以及慢性疼痛对心理健康的影响,这些都比之前想象的早了几十年。截肢后的慢性疼痛仍然是军事康复的一个重要问题。第一次世界大战和最近的伊拉克和阿富汗冲突中的伤害模式之间的相似性意味着,这些历史方面仍然与当今的军事人员、临床医生、研究人员和政策制定者相关。
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来源期刊
Pain Reports
Pain Reports Medicine-Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
93
审稿时长
8 weeks
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