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by gforge
3203 days ago
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I agree, there are serious issues with many of the drug treatments and psychiatry has some dark history - but so does orthopaedics (e.g. the pseudotumors associated with hip resurfacing). Even if anti-depressants are no more effective than placebo, I still think a knife may be an even worse alternative and I've seen patients spiraling down into an abyss of pain after repeated failed surgeries. My hope is that if we are able to correctly identify the cause we can start getting somewhere with the treatment. This said, there are indications that there is a subset of cases where the pain actually is triggered by the spine. The SweSpine register has some interesting numbers that show the results after surgery over time (http://4s.nu/pdf/Report_2014_Swespine_Engl_ver_141204.pdf page 37, DDD). There is also the very fascinating study by Arlbert et al (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23404353) that show that antibiotics may help. As always LBP is most likely a mix of diagnoses where we need to identify the correct subgroups before we even start to test treatments. |
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> I've seen patients spiraling down into an abyss of pain after repeated failed surgeries.
I think surgery is commonly seen as better than doing nothing. Someone I know has some deterioration from cortisone medications. He just heard that his neck implant didn't fail, now the next joint down is gone. He'd rather not have surgery again, but is rather miserable currently, and some doctors make their money by doing surgery...
Do you have any comments on Inertia in Medicine? Doctors try to stay up to date, but... well, cardiologists seem to resist acknowledging that statins don't actually help many patients, and psychiatrists are very resistant to admitting that antipsychotics prevent their patients from recovering from their psychotic episodes...
What does medicine do well, and how can use of practices and procedures with limited benefit be curtailed?