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Featured researches published by Boris Zernikow.


BMC Pediatrics | 2012

Characteristics of highly impaired children with severe chronic pain: a 5-year retrospective study on 2249 pediatric pain patients

Boris Zernikow; Julia Wager; Tanja Hechler; Carola Hasan; Uta Rohr; Michael Dobe; Adrian Meyer; Bettina Hübner-Möhler; C. Wamsler; Markus Blankenburg

BackgroundPrevalence of pain as a recurrent symptom in children is known to be high, but little is known about children with high impairment from chronic pain seeking specialized treatment. The purpose of this study was the precise description of children with high impairment from chronic pain referred to the German Paediatric Pain Centre over a 5-year period.MethodsDemographic variables, pain characteristics and psychometric measures were assessed at the first evaluation. Subgroup analysis for sex, age and pain location was conducted and multivariate logistic regression applied to identify parameters associated with extremely high impairment.ResultsThe retrospective study consisted of 2249 children assessed at the first evaluation. Tension type headache (48%), migraine (43%) and functional abdominal pain (11%) were the most common diagnoses with a high rate of co-occurrence; 18% had some form of musculoskeletal pain disease. Irrespective of pain location, chronic pain disorder with somatic and psychological factors was diagnosed frequently (43%). 55% of the children suffered from more than one distinct pain diagnosis. Clinically significant depression and general anxiety scores were expressed by 24% and 19% of the patients, respectively. Girls over the age of 13 were more likely to seek tertiary treatment compared to boys. Nearly half of children suffered from daily or constant pain with a mean pain value of 6/10. Extremely high pain-related impairment, operationalized as a comprehensive measure of pain duration, frequency, intensity, pain-related school absence and disability, was associated with older age, multiple locations of pain, increased depression and prior hospital stays. 43% of the children taking analgesics had no indication for pharmacological treatment.ConclusionChildren with chronic pain are a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge as they often have two or more different pain diagnoses, are prone to misuse of analgesics and are severely impaired. They are at increased risk for developmental stagnation. Adequate treatment and referral are essential to interrupt progression of the chronic pain process into adulthood.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 2009

Effectiveness of a 3-week Multimodal Inpatient Pain Treatment for Adolescents Suffering From Chronic Pain : Statistical and Clinical Significance

Tanja Hechler; Michael Dobe; Joachim Kosfelder; U. Damschen; B. Hübner; Markus Blankenburg; Claudia Sauer; Boris Zernikow

ObjectiveThe present study aimed to investigate the effectiveness of a 3-week multimodal inpatient pain program for children and adolescents with chronic pain. MethodsEffectiveness was investigated for pain-related variables (pain intensity, pain-related disability) and emotional distress in 3 ways: (1) in terms of statistically significant changes; (2) in terms of the clinical significance of these changes by creating post-hoc outcome groups for pain-related variables and emotional distress; and (3) in terms of the clinically significant overall amelioration generalizing the outcome over 3 variables (ie, pain intensity, pain-related disability, and school absence). One hundred sixty-seven adolescents (aged between 11 and 18 y) with various pain disorders (50% with headache) who met inpatient criteria were evaluated at baseline and 3 months posttreatment. ResultsPatients demonstrated statistically significant changes in all variables with large to medium effect sizes. Seventy-two percent and 45% of the patients demonstrated clinically significant changes in pain intensity and pain-related disability, respectively. The percentages of patients demonstrating clinically significant change in emotional distress ranged from 13% to 26%. Seventy-seven adolescents demonstrated overall amelioration. DiscussionResults of the study are promising in at least 2 ways: (1) a multimodal inpatient program might stop the negative effects of chronic pain, disability, and emotional distress in children and adolescents, and (2) the exploration of clinical significance testing has demonstrated utility and can be applied to future effectiveness studies in pediatric pain.


Pain | 2010

Reference values for quantitative sensory testing in children and adolescents: developmental and gender differences of somatosensory perception.

Markus Blankenburg; H. Boekens; Tanja Hechler; Christoph Maier; Elena K. Krumova; A. Scherens; Walter Magerl; F. Aksu; Boris Zernikow

&NA; The Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST) protocol of the German research network on neuropathic pain (DFNS) encompassing all somatosensory modalities assesses the functioning of different nerve fibers and of central pathways. The aim of our study was: (1) to explore, whether this QST protocol is feasible for children, (2) to detect distribution properties of QST data and the impact of body site, age and gender and (3) to establish reference values for QST in children and adolescents. The QST protocol of the DFNS with modification of instructions and pain rating was used in 176 children aged 6.12–16.12 years for six body sites. QST was feasible for children over 5 years of age. ANOVAs revealed developmental, gender and body site differences of somatosensory functions similar to adults. The face was more sensitive than the hand and/or foot. Younger children (6–8 years) were generally less sensitive to all thermal and mechanical detection stimuli but more sensitive to all pain stimuli than older (9–12 years) children, whereas there were little differences between older children and adolescents (13–17 years). Girls were more sensitive to thermal detection and pain stimuli, but not to mechanical detection and pain stimuli. Reference values differ from adults, but distribution properties (range, variance, and side differences) were similar and plausible for statistical factors. Our results demonstrate that the full QST protocol is feasible and valid for children over 5 years of age with their own reference values.


Pain | 2014

Inpatient-based intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment for highly impaired children with severe chronic pain: Randomized controlled trial of efficacy and economic effects

Tanja Hechler; Ann-Kristin Ruhe; Pia Schmidt; Jessica Hirsch; Julia Wager; Michael Dobe; Frank Krummenauer; Boris Zernikow

Summary Intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment is effective for highly impaired children with chronic pain in terms of the childs well‐being and the economic effects. ABSTRACT Pediatric chronic pain, which can result in deleterious effects for the child, bears the risk of aggravation into adulthood. Intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment (IIPT) might be an effective treatment, given the advantage of consulting with multiple professionals on a daily basis. Evidence for the effectiveness of IIPT is scarce. We investigated the efficacy of an IIPT within a randomized controlled trial by comparing an intervention group (IG) (n = 52) to a waiting‐list control group (WCG) (n = 52). We made assessments before treatment (PRE), immediately after treatment (POST), as well as at short‐term (POST6MONTHS) and long‐term (POST12MONTHS) follow‐up. We determined a combined endpoint, improvement (pain intensity, disability, school absence), and investigated 3 additional outcome domains (anxiety, depression, catastrophizing). We also investigated changes in economic parameters (health care use, parental work absenteeism, subjective financial burden) and their relationship to the childs improvement. Results at POST showed that significantly more children in the IG than in the WCG were assigned to improvement (55% compared to 14%; Fisher P < .001; 95% confidence interval for incidence difference: 0.21% to 0.60%). Although immediate effects were achieved for disability, school absence, depression, and catastrophizing, pain intensity and anxiety did not change until short‐term follow‐up. More than 60% of the children in both groups were improved long‐term. The parents reported significant reductions in all economic parameters. The results from the present study support the efficacy of the IIPT. Future research is warranted to investigate differences in treatment response and to understand the changes in economic parameters in nonimproved children.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 1998

Gosling's Doppler pulsatility index revisited.

Erik Michel; Boris Zernikow

In Doppler sonography, the physiological meaning of Goslings pulsatility index (PI) as a measure of downstream resistance is still under dispute. We deliver the theoretical derivation of its physiological significance. We present a mathematical model based on the linked theories of critical closing pressure (CCP) and cerebrovascular impedance, verified in preterm neonates. Mathematical transformation results in a series of equations interrelating several physiological parameters. Instead of indicating cerebrovascular resistance, PI is linked to the ratio of cerebrovascular impedances at the heart rate and at zero frequency. Next to arterial blood pressure, CCP is the principal determinant of PI. PI is identical to the ratio of the alternate and the direct component of the effective driving force. Thus, PI has no distinctive physiological meaning by itself. At present, our model is confined to physiological conditions where the lowest velocity is the end diastolic, and always more than zero.


European Journal of Pain | 2005

Pain in pediatric oncology — children's and parents' perspectives

Boris Zernikow; Ulrike Meyerhoff; Erik Michel; Thomas Wiesel; Carola Hasan; Gisela Janssen; Nana Kuhn; Udo Kontny; Rüdiger Fengler; Irene Görtitz; Werner Andler

There is a lack of valid epidemiological data on malignancy‐associated pain in modern pediatric oncology. Pediatric oncology patients (self‐assessment) and their parents from 28 hospitals were questioned using age‐adapted, structured interviews and validated pain assessment tools. Pain intensity was measured by the NRS and Bieri faces scale. We conducted 363 interviews with patients and their parents, and 46 with the parents alone (if patients <2.5 years). Pain was reported at the time of the interview or within the last 24 h, 7 d, or 4 weeks in 15%, 28%, 50% and 58% of cases, respectively. The proportion of patients suffering severe to maximal pain (NRS > 3; Bieri > 2) increased significantly (p = 0.001, χ2 test). The median pain intensity for the most severe pain episode within the last 4 weeks was 6.7 (NRS 0–10). Adverse effects of anti‐tumor therapy were the most frequent cause of pain. Multivariate analyses depicted general physical condition either “severely reduced” (ASA status 3) (OR 4.0, 95% CI 1.1‐14.7, p = 0.037) or “moderately reduced” (ASA status 2) (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.1‐2.9, p = 0.018), “in‐patient status” (OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.2‐2.9, p = 0.010), and “co‐morbidity present” (OR 3.5, 95% CI 1.1‐10.7, p = 0.030) as risk factors for severe to maximal pain. General anesthesia was the only factor significantly (OR 0.14, 95% CI 0.05‐0.39, p < 0.01) associated with a reduction in the proportion of patients suffering severe to maximal pain during bone marrow aspiration. Our data emphasize both the importance of in‐house acute pain control and the need for general anesthesia during painful procedures in pediatric oncology.


European Journal of Pain | 2006

Paediatric cancer pain management using the WHO analgesic ladder — results of a prospective analysis from 2265 treatment days during a quality improvement study

Boris Zernikow; Helen Smale; Erik Michel; Carola Hasan; Norbert Jorch; Werner Andler

Objective To collect data on pain management in paediatric oncology with respect to the WHO ladder approach.


Pediatrics | 2015

Systematic Review on Intensive Interdisciplinary Pain Treatment of Children With Chronic Pain

Tanja Hechler; Marie Kanstrup; Amy Lewandowski Holley; Laura E. Simons; Rikard K. Wicksell; Gerrit Hirschfeld; Boris Zernikow

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Pediatric debilitating chronic pain is a severe health problem, often requiring complex interventions such as intensive interdisciplinary pain treatment (IIPT). Research is lacking regarding the effectiveness of IIPT for children. The objective was to systematically review studies evaluating the effects of IIPT. METHODS: Cochrane, Medline/Ovid, PsycInfo/OVID, PubMed, PubPsych, and Web of Science were searched. Studies were included if (1) treatment was coordinated by ≥3 health professionals, (2) treatment occurred within an inpatient/day hospital setting, (3) patients were <22 years, (4) patients experienced debilitating chronic pain, (5) the study was published in English, and (6) the study had ≥10 participants at posttreatment. The child’s pain condition, characteristics of the IIPT, and 5 outcome domains (pain intensity, disability, school functioning, anxiety, depressive symptoms) were extracted at baseline, posttreatment, and follow-up. RESULTS: One randomized controlled trial and 9 nonrandomized treatment studies were identified and a meta-analysis was conducted separately on pain intensity, disability, and depressive symptoms revealing positive treatment effects. At posttreatment, there were large improvements for disability, and small to moderate improvements for pain intensity and depressive symptoms. The positive effects were maintained at short-term follow-up. Findings demonstrated extreme heterogeneity. CONCLUSIONS: Effects in nonrandomized treatment studies cannot be attributed to IIPT alone. Because of substantial heterogeneity in measures for school functioning and anxiety, meta-analyses could not be computed. There is preliminary evidence for positive treatment effects of IIPT, but the small number of studies and their methodological weaknesses suggest a need for more research on IIPTs for children.


European Journal of Pain | 2010

Effectiveness of a multimodal inpatient treatment for pediatric chronic pain: A comparison between children and adolescents

Tanja Hechler; Markus Blankenburg; Michael Dobe; Joachim Kosfelder; B. Hübner; Boris Zernikow

Objectives To evaluate short and long‐term treatment outcome of children (7–10 years) in comparison to adolescents (11–18 years) with disabling chronic pain following multimodal inpatient pain treatment.


Archive | 2001

Schmerztherapie bei Kindern

Boris Zernikow

Schmerztherapie bei Kindern sollte immer aus einer Kombination medizinischer und psychologischer Masnahmen bestehen. Letztere sind bei bestimmten chronischen Schmerzformen – wie den funktionellen Bauchschmerzen – die einzig etablierte Therapie. Aus Platzgrunden muss sich dieses Kapitel jedoch weitgehend auf medikamentose Verfahren beschranken.

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Tanja Hechler

Witten/Herdecke University

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Julia Wager

Witten/Herdecke University

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Michael Dobe

Witten/Herdecke University

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Gerrit Hirschfeld

Witten/Herdecke University

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Erik Michel

Witten/Herdecke University

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F. Aksu

Witten/Herdecke University

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Carola Hasan

Boston Children's Hospital

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C. Wamsler

Witten/Herdecke University

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Ann-Kristin Ruhe

Witten/Herdecke University

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