Abigail S Cohen
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Abigail S Cohen.
Annals of Neurology | 2015
Adrian R. Parry-Jones; Joshua N. Goldstein; Floris H.B.M. Schreuder; Sami Tetri; Turgut Tatlisumak; Bernard Yan; Koen M. van Nieuwenhuizen; Nelly Dequatre-Ponchelle; Matthew Lee-Archer; Solveig Horstmann; Duncan Wilson; Fulvio Pomero; Luca Masotti; Christine Lerpiniere; Daniel Agustin Godoy; Abigail S Cohen; Rik Houben; Rustam Al-Shahi Salman; Paolo Pennati; Luigi Fenoglio; David J. Werring; Roland Veltkamp; Edith Wood; Helen M. Dewey; Charlotte Cordonnier; Catharina J.M. Klijn; Fabrizio Meligeni; Stephen M. Davis; Juha Huhtakangas; Julie Staals
There is little evidence to guide treatment strategies for intracerebral hemorrhage on vitamin K antagonists (VKA‐ICH). Treatments utilized in clinical practice include fresh frozen plasma (FFP) and prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC). Our aim was to compare case fatality with different reversal strategies.
Pain Medicine | 2015
Yi Zhang; Shihab U. Ahmed; Trang Vo; Kristin St. Hilaire; Mary Houghton; Abigail S Cohen; Jianren Mao; Lucy Chen
OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to compare the sensitivity to experimental pain of chronic pain patients on opioid therapy vs chronic pain patients on non-opioid therapy and healthy subjects by quantitative sensory testing (QST). SETTING There is a growing body of evidence demonstrating that chronic use of opioid drugs may alter pain sensitivity. Identifying the characteristic changes in thermal pain sensitivity in chronic opioid users will be helpful in diagnosing pain sensitivity alterations associated with chronic opioid use. METHODS Utilizing an office-based QST technique, we examined thermal pain threshold, tolerance, and temporal summation in 172 chronic pain subjects receiving opioid therapy, 121 chronic pain subjects receiving non-opioid therapy, and 129 healthy subjects. RESULTS In chronic pain subjects receiving opioid therapy, there were detectable differences in QST characteristics compared with both chronic pain subjects receiving non-opioid therapy and healthy subjects. Specifically, in chronic pain subjects receiving opioid therapy, 1) sensitivity to heat pain was increased; threshold to heat pain was significantly lower; 2) tolerance to supra-threshold heat pain was significantly decreased; and 3) temporal pain summation was exacerbated, as compared with chronic pain subjects receiving non-opioid therapy. In a subgroup of chronic pain subjects receiving opioid therapy with increased heat pain sensitivity, their average opioid medication dosage was significantly higher than those who had an above-average heat pain threshold. Moreover, a subset of chronic pain subjects on opioid therapy exhibited a significant decrease in diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC) compared with chronic pain subjects on non-opioid therapy. CONCLUSION These findings suggest that a subset of QST parameters can reflect opioid-associated thermal pain sensitivity alteration, including decreased heat pain threshold, decreased cold and heat pain tolerance, diminished DNIC, and/or exacerbated temporal summation.
Anesthesiology | 2015
Shihab U. Ahmed; Yi Zhang; Lucy Chen; Abigail S Cohen; Kristin St. Hillary; Trang Vo; Mary Houghton; Jianren Mao
Background:Neuropathic pain is a condition resulting from injury to the peripheral and/or central nervous system. Despite extensive research over the last several decades, neuropathic pain remains difficult to manage. Methods:The authors conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded, and crossover clinical trial to examine the effect of 1.5% topical diclofenac (TD) on neuropathic pain. The authors hypothesized that 1.5% TD would reduce the visual pain score and improve both quantitative sensory testing and functional status in subjects with neuropathic pain. The authors recruited subjects with postherpetic neuralgia and complex regional pain syndrome. The primary outcome was subject’s visual pain score. Results:Twenty-eight subjects completed the study (12 male and 16 female) with the mean age of 48.8 yr. After 2 weeks of topical application, subjects in 1.5% TD group showed lower overall visual pain score compared with placebo group (4.9 [1.9] vs. 5.6 [2.1], difference: 0.8; 95% CI, 0.1 to 1.3; P = 0.04) as well as decreased burning pain (2.9 [2.6] vs. 4.3 [2.8], difference, 1.4; 95% CI, 0.2 to 2.6; P = 0.01). There were no statistical differences in constant pain, shooting pain, or hypersensitivity over the painful area between the groups. This self-reported improvement of pain was corroborated by the decreased pain summation detected by quantitative sensory testing. There were no statistically significant changes in functional status in these subjects. There were no complications in both groups. Conclusion:The findings indicate that 1.5% TD may serve as an effective treatment option for patients with neuropathic pain from postherpetic neuralgia and complex regional pain syndrome.
Neuromodulation | 2015
Shihab U. Ahmed; Yi Zhang; Lucy Chen; Kristin St. Hillary; Abigail S Cohen; Trang Vo; Mary Houghton; Jianren Mao
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been in clinical use for nearly four decades. In earliest observations, researchers found a significant increase in pain threshold during SCS therapy without changes associated with touch, position, and vibration sensation. Subsequent studies yielded diverse results regarding how SCS impacts pain and other sensory thresholds. This pilot study uses quantitative sensory testing (QST) to objectively quantify the impact of SCS on warm sensation, heat pain threshold, and heat pain tolerance.
Pain Medicine | 2016
Cheng-ting Lee; Trang Vo; Abigail S Cohen; Shihab U. Ahmed; Yi Zhang; Jianren Mao; Lucy Chen
OBJECTIVE To examine similarities and differences in urine drug test (UDT) results in clinical pain patients and pain subjects participating in pain research studies. DESIGN An observational study with retrospective chart review and data analysis. METHODS We analyzed 1,874 UDT results obtained from 1) clinical pain patients (Clinical Group; n = 1,529) and 2) pain subjects consented to participate in pain research studies (Research Group; n = 345). Since several medications such as opioids used in pain management are drugs of abuse (DOA) and can result in a positive UDT, we specifically identified those cases of positive UDT due to nonprescribed DOA and designated these cases as positive UDT with DOA (PUD). RESULTS We found that 1) there was a higher rate of PUD in clinical pain patients (41.3%) than in pain research study subjects (14.8%); 2) although subjects in the Research Group were informed ahead of time that UDT will be conducted as a screening test, a substantial number (14.8%) of pain research study subjects still showed PUD; 3) there were different types of DOA between clinical pain patients (cannabinoids as the top DOA) and research study subjects (cocaine as the top DOA); and 4) a common factor associated with PUD was opioid therapy in both Clinical Group and Research Group. CONCLUSION These results support previous findings that PUD is a common finding in clinical pain patients, particularly in those prescribed opioid therapy, and we suggest that UDT be used as routine screening testing in pain research studies.
The Journal of Pain | 2013
Lucy Chen; Trang Vo; Lindsey Seefeld; Charlene Malarick; Mary Houghton; Shihab U. Ahmed; Yi Zhang; Abigail S Cohen; Cynthia Retamozo; Kristen St. Hilaire; Vivian Zhang; Jianren Mao
Internal and Emergency Medicine | 2018
Murtaza Akhter; Andrea Morotti; Abigail S Cohen; Yuchiao Chang; Alison Ayres; Kristin Schwab; Anand Viswanathan; Mahmut Edip Gurol; Christopher D. Anderson; Steven M. Greenberg; Jonathan Rosand; Joshua N. Goldstein
Stroke | 2016
Mark R. Etherton; Ona Wu; Arne Lauer; Gregoire Boulouis; Lisa Cloonan; Abigail S Cohen; William A. Copen; Pedro Telles Cougo-Pinto; Natalia S. Rost
Stroke | 2016
Ona Wu; Arne Lauer; Gregoire Boulouis; Lisa Cloonan; Mark R. Etherton; Abigail S Cohen; Pedro Telles Cougo-Pinto; Katherine Mott; William A. Copen; Natalia S. Rost
Stroke | 2015
Abigail S Cohen; Khawja A Siddiqui; Syed F. Ali; Christopher D. Anderson; Scott Silverman; Lee H. Schwamm