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 Evidence-based interventional pain management: principles, problems, potential  and applications Manchikanti L; Boswell MV; Giordano JPain Physician  2007[Mar]; 10 (2): 329-56BACKGROUND: The past decade has been marked by unprecedented interest in  evidence-based medicine (EBM) and a focus upon the use of innovative methods and  protocols to provide valid and reliable information for and about healthcare.  Thus (it is at least purported that), healthcare decisions are increasingly being  based upon research-derived evidence, rather than on expert opinion or clinical  experience alone. But this quest for evidence to support clinical practice also  compels the question of whether the methods employed to acquire information, the  ranking of information that is acquired, and the prudent use of this information  are sound enough to actually sustain the validity of an evidence-based paradigm  in practice. Moreover, it is becoming apparent that the scope, depth, and  applicability of available evidence to effectively and ethically guide the myriad  of situational decisions in clinical practice is not uniform across all medical  fields or disciplines. In particular, comprehensive evidence synthesis or  complete guidelines for clinical decision-making in interventional pain  management remain relatively scarce. EBM is defined as the conscientious,  explicit, and judicious use of the current best evidence in making decisions  about the care of individual patients. Thus, the practice of EBM requires the  integration of individual clinical expertise with the best available external  evidence from systematic research. To arrive at evidence-based medical decisions  all valid and relevant evidence should be considered alongside randomized  controlled trials, patient preferences, and resources. OBJECTIVE: To describe  principles of EBM, and the methods and relative utility of evidence synthesis in  interventional pain management. DESCRIPTION: This review provides 1) an  understanding of evidence-based medicine, 2) an overview of issues related to  evaluating the quality of individual studies, analyses, narrative, and systematic  reviews, 3) discussion of factors affecting the strength and value(s) of  evidence, 4) analysis of specific reviews of interventional techniques, and  finally, 5) the utility and purpose of guidelines in interventional pain  management. CONCLUSION: Interpreting and understanding evidence synthesis,  systematic reviews and other analytic literature is a difficult task. It is  crucial for pain physicians to understand the goals, principles, and process(es)  of EBM so as to meaningfully improve its application(s). This knowledge affords  better insight into not only the analytic reviews in interventional pain  management provided herein, but ultimately allows future information to be  selected, evaluated, and used with prudence in technically competent, ethically  sound medical practice.|*Pain Management[MESH]|Clinical Trials as Topic/methods/standards[MESH]|Evidence-Based Medicine/*methods/standards[MESH]|Humans[MESH]
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