Pain Practice

Papers
(The H4-Index of Pain Practice is 18. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-09-01 to 2025-09-01.)
ArticleCitations
Long‐term impact of spinal cord stimulation in FBSS patients: A retrospective ten‐year analysis54
Issue Information52
Dorsal root ganglion stimulation device explantation: A multicenter pooled data analysis38
Efficacy of quadratus lumborum block on postoperative pain and side effects in patients who underwent urological surgery: A meta‐analysis36
The use of ketamine infusion to dramatically reduce opioid requirements in a patient whose high‐dose intrathecal opioid pump was inadvertently cut during surgery34
Pocket pain following spinal cord stimulator generator implantation: A narrative review of this under‐reported risk29
A case of secondary trigeminal neuralgia due to lateral medullary syndrome treated with trigeminal ganglion radiofrequency ablation27
Insomnia symptoms and chronic pain: Outcomes of an interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation program27
Retrograde thoracic spinal cord stimulation paddle placement for complex persistent spinal pain syndrome type 226
Overlap of pain‐related and general measures of disability among adults with chronic pain24
Lacertus notch as a sign of lacertus syndrome24
Trends in Spinal Pain Procedure Volumes and Reimbursements: An Analysis of 20 Years of Medicare Data23
Mapping guideline‐informed care for chronic non‐specific low back pain with the biopsychosocial approach: A rapid review22
Non‐drug pain relievers active on non‐opioid pain mechanisms21
Online pain management programs for chronic, widespread musculoskeletal conditions: A systematic review with meta‐analysis21
Efficacy and safety of perioperative ketamine for the prevention of chronic postsurgical pain: A meta‐analysis20
Painfully Obvious? Non‐Operative Drivers of Post‐Operative Pain and Opioid Exposure in a Predominantly Emergency Surgical Cohort: A Multicentre Observational Study Identifying Non‐Operative, Periopera19
Issue Information19
Issue Information18
18
18
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