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Mobility and Activity
Researchers at Lawson are propelled by the people who will benefit from the best in complex rehabilitative science.
One in 10 Canadians has a mobility disability – and we’re laser-focused on discovering how to help people whose lives have been upended by spinal cord injuries, stroke, brain injuries, chronic pain, accidents, falls, trauma or degenerative disease.
Situated at the Gray Centre for Mobility and Activity within St. Joseph’s Health Care London’s Parkwood Institute, the region’s largest provider of rehabilitation and recovery health, we bring our research into practice using all the resources a health institute and teaching hospital can offer together.
We share our innovations with the world – and we share the world’s research too, as we’ve created and curated the biggest database of international research on stroke, traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injuries.
Lawson mobility researchers comprise one of the largest and most accomplished teams in the country: including a research chair, established world-class scientists, emerging researchers, dozens of trainees and more than 100 students.
Our work helps people around the world lead active and healthy lives. Read on to discover where it will lead you.
Lawson leads mobility and activity research:
Relieving the pain: Current research on pain and its management
There has been an explosion of scientific knowledge that is helping us to uncover the changes that happen when an individual develops pain, giving millions of people the hope that they will be better able to manage their own pain.
Pain is one of the most common reasons people seek medical attention. In Canada, 25 per cent of adults are affected by chronic pain and that statistic moves up to 50 per cent in the elderly.
Acute and ongoing pain have traditionally been hard to understand and there has isn’t always a clear answer for tackling these issues. We do know that ongoing pain can have significant impacts on one’s wellbeing.
Join Lawson Health Research Institute for our next Café Scientifique to hear a panel of experts share more about local research in the areas of:
- The role of opioid and cannabis analgesics in the management of pain.
- The impact of pain for individuals and families, including children experiencing pain, and some of the barriers to its management.
- The growing understanding of the mechanisms of pain to create the best long-term results for patients.
- Educational tools for patients and caregivers.
Speakers
- Dr. Dwight Moulin, Clinical Neurological Sciences and Oncology
- Dr. Naveen Poonai, Paediatric Emergency Medicine
- Dr. Dave Walton, School of Physical Therapy
- MODERATOR – Dr. Kathy Speechley, Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Event Details
Date: Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Time: 7-9 pm (doors open at 6:30 pm)
Location: Best Western Plus Lamplighter Inn & Conference Centre, 591 Wellington Rd, London, ON N6C 4R3
Map and directions
Parking: Ample free parking on-site
This is a free community event and online registration is REQUIRED.
Click here to register.
Lawson is the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
Research encourages re-evaluation of special nerve treatment for chronic pain
LONDON, ON – Hospital researchers from Lawson Health Research Institute have published a recent study that assessed the use of a specialized treatment for chronic pain and its impact on health care use and opioid prescribing.
Paravertebral blocks (PVBs) belong to a broader group of procedures called “nerve blocks.” A recent Toronto Star report noted that OHIP has been billed $420 million for nerve block procedures since 2011. PVBs involve injecting medication around the nerves where they exit the bones of the spine, at different locations depending on the patient and the chronic pain they are experiencing.
The regular use of these procedures has been questioned by health care providers due to the high cost and limited evidence of their benefit in reducing chronic pain. While the effectiveness of PVBs has been examined in trauma, cancer pain and regional anesthesia during surgery, they have not been evaluated for use in chronic pain despite widespread use in Ontario.
It is estimated that one in five Canadians live with chronic pain. Pain that persists can affect all aspects of someone’s life and health, particularly when it is not being managed.
This new study from London researchers found that 66,310 patients had a PVB between July 2013 and March 2018, and 47,723 patients were included in the study. In the year after a patient’s first PVB, there was a significant increase in the number of physician visits. Additional PVBs were frequently performed after the first treatment, with over 26 per cent of patients receiving a PVB ten or more times in one year, with almost eight per cent of patients receiving 30 or more. No overall change was found in opioid dosage in the year after PVB was initiated compared to the year before.
“Frequent use of PVB is common. Initiating treatment with PVCs is associated with marked increases in health care utilization, which includes physician visits and other injection procedures,” explains Dr. Eldon Loh, Lawson Associate Scientist and Physiatrist at St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
This research provides a broad perspective on the use of PVBs in Ontario, and on the use of nerve blocking treatments in general. There has been a concern for several years about the over use of these procedures; however, this is the first study to systematically document the impact on health care utilization and opioid use.
"We hope that from this study, the appropriate use of PVBs and other pain interventions will be re-evaluated at a provincial level to ensure the use of health resources is being properly managed and we achieve the best outcome for patients,” Dr. Loh adds.
The study, “A Retrospective Cohort Study of Healthcare Utilization Associated with Paravertebral Blocks for Chronic Pain Management in Ontario,” is published in the Canadian Journal of Pain.
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Lawson Health Research Institute is one of Canada’s top hospital-based research institutes, tackling the most pressing challenges in health care. As the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, our innovation happens where care is delivered. Lawson research teams are at the leading-edge of science with the goal of improving health and the delivery of care for patients. Working in partnership with Western University, our researchers are encouraged to pursue their curiosity, collaborate often and share their discoveries widely. Research conducted through Lawson makes a difference in the lives of patients, families and communities around the world. To learn more, visit www.lawsonresearch.ca.
Senior Media Relations Consultant
Communications & Public Engagement
T: 519-685-8500 ext. 73502
Celine.zadorsky@lhsc.on.ca
Research encourages re-evaluation of special nerve treatment for chronic pain
Hospital researchers from Lawson Health Research Institute have published a recent study that assessed the use of a specialized treatment for chronic pain and its impact on health care use and opioid prescribing.
Paravertebral blocks (PVBs) belong to a broader group of procedures called “nerve blocks.” A recent Toronto Star report noted that OHIP has been billed $420 million for nerve block procedures since 2011. PVBs involve injecting medication around the nerves where they exit the bones of the spine, at different locations depending on the patient and the chronic pain they are experiencing.
The regular use of these procedures has been questioned by health care providers due to the high cost and limited evidence of their benefit in reducing chronic pain. While the effectiveness of PVBs has been examined in trauma, cancer pain and regional anesthesia during surgery, they have not been evaluated for use in chronic pain despite widespread use in Ontario.
It is estimated that one in five Canadians live with chronic pain. Pain that persists can affect all aspects of someone’s life and health, particularly when it is not being managed.
“Frequent use of PVB is common. Initiating treatment with PVCs is associated with marked increases in health care utilization, which includes physician visits and other injection procedures,” explains Dr. Eldon Loh, Lawson Associate Scientist and Physiatrist at St. Joseph’s Health Care London.
This research provides a broad perspective on the use of PVBs in Ontario, and on the use of nerve blocking treatments in general. There has been a concern for several years about the over use of these procedures; however, this is the first study to systematically document the impact on health care utilization and opioid use.
"We hope that from this study, the appropriate use of PVBs and other pain interventions will be re-evaluated at a provincial level to ensure the use of health resources is being properly managed and we achieve the best outcome for patients,” Dr. Loh adds.
Researchers investigate a new method of sedation for paediatric patients
Scientists at Children’s Health Research Institute (a program of Lawson Health Research Institute), Sunnybrook Research Institute and The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) are working together to study the potential benefits of inhaled sedation as an alternative to keep critically ill children sedated and comfortable.
“Many sick children need support from a ventilator and other life-saving treatments, and may require intravenous (IV) sedatives to tolerate these uncomfortable therapies,” says Dr. Rishi Ganesan, Lawson Associate Scientist and Paediatric Neurocritical Care Physician at Children’s Hospital at London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC). “However, our current sedation options may contribute to a complication called delirium. We are interested in evaluating if delirium and long-term neurological complications are lower in children receiving inhaled sedation compared to those receiving IV sedation, which is the current standard of care.”
Delirium is an acute change in mental state that children in critical care can sometimes develop as a result of their critical illness and the medications and therapies they receive during their hospital stay. Delirium presents as confusion, disorientation, agitation, excessive drowsiness or poor attention. Dr. Marat Slessarev, Lawson Scientist and Critical Care Physician at LHSC, has been researching and comparing inhaled sedation to IV sedation in adults since the pandemic hit in 2020 in a collaborative trial called SAVE-ICU with Dr. Angela Jerath, Anesthesiologist and Scientist at Sunnybrook.
“One of the challenges with IV sedation is that we do not have a way to measure the level of sedatives in the blood,” explains Dr. Slessarev. “Critically ill patients that are sedated can sometimes develop issues with the kidney and liver, which are both important in eliminating the sedatives from the blood stream.”
Through this novel collaborative research, the team is now looking at the potential benefits of inhaled sedation in paediatric patients.
“Inhaled sedatives are an alternative to currently used IV sedatives, and they may reduce delirium and accelerate brain recovery. Inhaled sedatives are used safely every day in operating rooms, widely available and inexpensive,” explains Dr. Jerath. “In contrast to IV sedatives, they do not accumulate in the body, are rapidly eliminated via the lungs, promote faster awakening and discharge from a ventilator, and reduce inflammation – which may be a contributing factor to delirium.”
Enrollment for the ABOVE trial is beginning at Children’s Hospital at LHSC and SickKids. The pilot study will enroll 60 critically ill paediatric patients who will be randomized into two groups; one group will receive inhaled sedation while the other will get standard IV sedation. Once the pilot phase of the trial is complete, the team hopes to expand this trial across the country with more paediatric intensive care units (ICUs) joining the larger trial.
“The field of critical care has made significant strides in life-saving technologies and therapies in recent years, but now we are focused on finding ways to ensure our patients continue to do well after leaving the hospital,” says Dr. Nicole McKinnon, Critical Care Physician and lead investigator at SickKids and a Scientist Track Investigator at SickKids Research Insitute. “This trial is a first step in better understanding the effects of sedative and pain medications on children’s longer-term neurocognitive development. Our research will be key to providing critically ill children with the greatest chance to flourish at home.”
“This has the potential to change how critically ill children are cared for in paediatric ICUs across Canada and the world,” adds Dr. Ganesan. “We hope that inhaled sedation makes a difference in children’s long-term functional outcomes, so they can thrive and achieve their full potential.”
The ABOVE Trial recently received funding through a Canadian Institute for Health Research (CIHR) grant.
About Sunnybrook Research Institute: Sunnybrook Research Institute (SRI) is the research arm of Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, an internationally recognized academic health sciences centre fully affiliated with the University of Toronto. With well-established programs in basic and applied sciences which span across three scientific platforms and ten clinical programs, SRI is developing innovations in care for the more than 1.3 million patients the hospital cares for annually. To learn more, visit www.sunnybrook.ca/research
About The Hospital for Sick Children: The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) is recognized as one of the world’s foremost paediatric health-care institutions and is Canada’s leading centre dedicated to advancing children’s health through the integration of patient care, research and education. Founded in 1875 and affiliated with the University of Toronto, SickKids is one of Canada’s most research-intensive hospitals and has generated discoveries that have helped children globally. Its mission is to provide the best in complex and specialized family-centred care; pioneer scientific and clinical advancements; share expertise; foster an academic environment that nurtures health-care professionals; and champion an accessible, comprehensive and sustainable child health system. SickKids is a founding member of Kids Health Alliance, a network of partners working to create a high quality, consistent and coordinated approach to paediatric health care that is centred around children, youth and their families. SickKids is proud of its vision for Healthier Children. A Better World.
Lawson Health Research Institute is one of Canada’s top hospital-based research institutes, tackling the most pressing challenges in health care. As the research institute of London Health Sciences Centre and St. Joseph’s Health Care London, our innovation happens where care is delivered. Lawson research teams are at the leading-edge of science with the goal of improving health and the delivery of care for patients. Working in partnership with Western University, our researchers are encouraged to pursue their curiosity, collaborate often and share their discoveries widely. Research conducted through Lawson makes a difference in the lives of patients, families and communities around the world. To learn more, visit www.lawsonresearch.ca.
Communications Consultant & External Relations
Lawson Health Research Institute
T: 519-685-8500 ext. ext. 64059
C: 226-919-4748
@email