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Description
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The IASP Pain Research Forum is partnering with the IASP Neuropathic Pain Special Interest Group (NeuPSIG) to host a seminar with Mark Bicket, MD, PhD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, US, and Tina Doshi, MD, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, US. A Q&A session moderated by Simon Haroutounian, PhD, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, US, will follow the presentations.
Here is an abstract for the event
Despite recognition of the profound societal impact of acute pain and an ever-increasing interest in the transition from acute pain to chronic pain, historical classification systems of acute pain have been limited. In 2016, the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks (ACTTION) public-private partnership with the US Food and Drug Administration, the American Pain Society (APS), and the American Academy of Pain Medicine (AAPM) convened an expert panel to develop an acute pain taxonomy that would reflect contemporary mechanistic insights and guide future pain research and treatment. The resulting consensus report published the following year outlined the ACTTION-APS-AAPM Acute Pain Taxonomy (AAAPT), a multidimensional acute pain classification system. Since then, a series of papers presenting acute pain diagnostic criteria using the AAAPT framework for various acute pain conditions has been published, including the AAAPT Diagnostic Criteria for Acute Abdominal and Peritoneal Pain After Surgery and, most recently, the AAAPT Diagnostic Criteria for Acute Neuropathic Pain. In this seminar, we will discuss the AAAPT framework in the context of these diagnostic criteria, its relevance to clinical care and research, and what chronic pain researchers can learn from the study of acute pain.