Description
📕 Interventional Pain Control in Cancer Pain Management (OUP Oxford, 1st ed.)
🧠 Overview
A specialist, clinically grounded guide to interventional procedures for cancer pain, aimed at clinicians managing refractory or complex pain when standard pharmacologic approaches aren’t enough. It focuses heavily on neuraxial techniques (epidural/intrathecal), patient selection, and safe practical delivery in real settings.
⭐ Key Features
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🧩 Problem-first structure: starts with the clinical landscape and “difficult pain problems,” then builds toward interventions.
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💉 Deep coverage of neuraxial infusions (epidural + intrathecal): anatomy, commonly used drugs, pharmacokinetics, side effects, and evidence base.
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🧠 Sections on mechanisms of cancer pain to support better technique selection.
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👩⚕️ Practical guidance on patient selection, equipment, technique steps, and complications.
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🧑⚕️ Includes practical nursing management of epidural/intrathecal infusions (useful for service delivery).
✅ Key Benefits
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🚨 Helps teams manage refractory cancer pain with clearer pathways for when to escalate to interventional options.
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🛡️ Strong emphasis on safety, complications, and appropriate selection, which is the core risk point in cancer pain interventions.
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🤝 Useful for building or standardizing a cancer pain intervention service (shared language across clinicians + nurses).
👥 Ideal For
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🎯 Pain physicians / pain teams, palliative care clinicians
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🏥 Anesthesiologists involved in advanced pain / neuraxial infusions
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👩⚕️ Oncology & palliative care services coordinating complex analgesia
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👩⚕️ Nursing staff supporting neuraxial infusion pathways
🏷️ Categories
Best fit:
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Pain management
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Pain Medicine
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Oncology
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Anesthesia Education & Reference
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Anesthesiology
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Medical Education
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Residents & Fellows (especially pain/palliative-focused)
🎯 Recommendation
Choose this book if your audience needs a procedure-focused, practical reference for advanced cancer pain control (especially neuraxial infusion strategies + operational delivery). If your buyers are mainly general clinicians, a broader “cancer pain overview” text may convert better—this one is more specialist/interventional.






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