Contemporary studies of pain from basic research to clinical practice - Symposium organised by the International Anaesthesia Research Society (IARS)
ESAIC Academy. Naranjo M. 06/05/17; 184025; 593
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In 2017 the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS) has organized a symposium entitled Contemporary Studies of Pain from Basic Research to Clinical Practice. Control of pain and anti-nociception are key objectives for treatment of chronic pain, intraoperative management during general anesthesia and post-operative pain management. Rapid basic science progress is being made in deciphering pain mechanisms. In addition, strategies to reduce the use of opioids to treat pain and to manage anti-nociception during general anesthesia are being actively tested by anaesthesiologists in clinical practice. In this symposium three experts present updates on basic science and clinical research in pain, and on new approaches that are being tested empirically to manage anti-nociception and pain using techniques that use little to no opioids.
Professor Irene Tracey from Oxford in the United Kingdom will review her exciting work using functional neuroimaging to map pain pathways in human subjects. Her talk is entitled New Insights into Human Pain Mechanisms from Advanced Neuroimaging. Professor James Eisenach from Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in the United States will survey his recent work using modern systems neuroscience techniques such as optogenetics to study pain in rodent models. He will relate this work to clinical practice in a talk entitled Beyond ERAS: Biologic Systems which Regulate Speed of Recovery after Injury. Dr. Marusa Naranjo, the Director of the Anesthesia Service at Clínica de Mérida has extensive experience developing and using opioid-free anesthesia techniques. She will share the results from her clinical practice in her presentation entitled Opioid-Free Anesthesia: Theory and Practice.
The symposium will be moderated by Professor Emery N. Brown from Massachusettts (Massachusetts) General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Brown is a member of the Board of Trustees of the IARS. The session will last 90 minutes.
Professor Irene Tracey from Oxford in the United Kingdom will review her exciting work using functional neuroimaging to map pain pathways in human subjects. Her talk is entitled New Insights into Human Pain Mechanisms from Advanced Neuroimaging. Professor James Eisenach from Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in the United States will survey his recent work using modern systems neuroscience techniques such as optogenetics to study pain in rodent models. He will relate this work to clinical practice in a talk entitled Beyond ERAS: Biologic Systems which Regulate Speed of Recovery after Injury. Dr. Marusa Naranjo, the Director of the Anesthesia Service at Clínica de Mérida has extensive experience developing and using opioid-free anesthesia techniques. She will share the results from her clinical practice in her presentation entitled Opioid-Free Anesthesia: Theory and Practice.
The symposium will be moderated by Professor Emery N. Brown from Massachusettts (Massachusetts) General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Brown is a member of the Board of Trustees of the IARS. The session will last 90 minutes.
In 2017 the International Anesthesia Research Society (IARS) has organized a symposium entitled Contemporary Studies of Pain from Basic Research to Clinical Practice. Control of pain and anti-nociception are key objectives for treatment of chronic pain, intraoperative management during general anesthesia and post-operative pain management. Rapid basic science progress is being made in deciphering pain mechanisms. In addition, strategies to reduce the use of opioids to treat pain and to manage anti-nociception during general anesthesia are being actively tested by anaesthesiologists in clinical practice. In this symposium three experts present updates on basic science and clinical research in pain, and on new approaches that are being tested empirically to manage anti-nociception and pain using techniques that use little to no opioids.
Professor Irene Tracey from Oxford in the United Kingdom will review her exciting work using functional neuroimaging to map pain pathways in human subjects. Her talk is entitled New Insights into Human Pain Mechanisms from Advanced Neuroimaging. Professor James Eisenach from Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in the United States will survey his recent work using modern systems neuroscience techniques such as optogenetics to study pain in rodent models. He will relate this work to clinical practice in a talk entitled Beyond ERAS: Biologic Systems which Regulate Speed of Recovery after Injury. Dr. Marusa Naranjo, the Director of the Anesthesia Service at Clínica de Mérida has extensive experience developing and using opioid-free anesthesia techniques. She will share the results from her clinical practice in her presentation entitled Opioid-Free Anesthesia: Theory and Practice.
The symposium will be moderated by Professor Emery N. Brown from Massachusettts (Massachusetts) General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Brown is a member of the Board of Trustees of the IARS. The session will last 90 minutes.
Professor Irene Tracey from Oxford in the United Kingdom will review her exciting work using functional neuroimaging to map pain pathways in human subjects. Her talk is entitled New Insights into Human Pain Mechanisms from Advanced Neuroimaging. Professor James Eisenach from Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in the United States will survey his recent work using modern systems neuroscience techniques such as optogenetics to study pain in rodent models. He will relate this work to clinical practice in a talk entitled Beyond ERAS: Biologic Systems which Regulate Speed of Recovery after Injury. Dr. Marusa Naranjo, the Director of the Anesthesia Service at Clínica de Mérida has extensive experience developing and using opioid-free anesthesia techniques. She will share the results from her clinical practice in her presentation entitled Opioid-Free Anesthesia: Theory and Practice.
The symposium will be moderated by Professor Emery N. Brown from Massachusettts (Massachusetts) General Hospital, Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dr. Brown is a member of the Board of Trustees of the IARS. The session will last 90 minutes.
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