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Publication Trends and Hot Spots in Chronic Postsurgical Pain (CPSP) Research: A 10-Year Bibliometric Analysis
- Source :
- Journal of Pain Research
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Dove, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Purpose Aging populations and increasing quality of life requirements have attracted growing efforts to study chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). However, a diverse range of factors are involved in CPSP development, which complicates efforts to predict and treat this disease. To advance research in this field, our study aimed to use bibliometric analysis to quantitatively and qualitatively evaluate CPSP research and predict research hot spots over the last 10 years. Methods Relevant publications between 2011 and 2020 were extracted from the Web of Science Core Collection database. CiteSpace software (v5.7.R2) and the Online Analysis Platform of Literature Metrology were used to analyze research attributes including countries and authors, keywords and co-occurrence, and burst detection to predict trends and hot spots. Results A total of 2493 publications were collected with the number of annual publications showing nearly threefold increase over the past decade. Articles were the primary publication type with the United States as the leading country and the center of national collaboration. Johns Hopkins University provided the leading influence within the CPSP field. Postoperative pain, multimodal analgesia, quality of life, opioid, microglia, cesarean delivery, inguinal hernia, chronification, genetic polymorphism, and lidocaine were the top 10 clusters in co-occurrence cluster analysis. Moreover, burst detection was shown that epidural analgesia, nerve injury, total hip arthroplasty were the new hot spots within the CPSP field. Conclusion Bibliometric mapping not only defined the overall structure of CPSP-related research but its collective information provides crucial assistance to direct ongoing research efforts. The prominent keywords including "risk factor" and "multimodal analgesia" indicate that CPSP prevention and new treatment methods remain hot spots. Nonetheless, the recognition that CPSP is complex and changeable, proposes comprehensive biopsychosocial approaches are needed, and these will be essential to improve CPSP interventions and outcomes.
- Subjects :
- Biopsychosocial model
medicine.medical_specialty
Bibliometric analysis
chronic postsurgical pain
business.industry
Postsurgical pain
Psychological intervention
Treatment method
Review
CiteSpace
Online analysis
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Quality of life (healthcare)
bibliometric analysis
medicine
Intensive care medicine
business
co-citation analysis
burst detection with keywords
Total hip arthroplasty
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 11787090
- Volume :
- 14
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Pain Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c18ec8b4ab5421788f53960ce14169c9