The Pain Relief Foundation Annual Lecture
Series
The Pain Relief Foundation started the Annual
Lecture a few years ago as a Millennium project.
Each year an eminent pain physician or scientist
is invited to lecture on a topic currently of
interest, in pain research or management. The
lecture is given each year in honour of a person
who contributed much to the field of pain treatment
or research during his or her career. A short
presentation about their life and work is given
before the lecture by a fellow academic or clinician.
The inaugural lecture was given by Russell Portenoy
in the year 2000.
2009
Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: What Causes it
and can it be Treated?
Anthony Dickenson, University College London, UK
IN HONOUR OF Mitchell Max, Pittsburgh, USA
Professor Anthony Dickenson is
professor of neuropharmacology at University
Colege, London. His
main research interest is in understanding the
mechanisms of pain and how pain can be controlled
in both normal and patho-physiological conditions.
Dr Mitchell Max was
the Director of the Molecular Epidemiology of
Pain Program at the University of Pittsburgh
Centre for Pain Research. He worked on
large cohort studies of inflammatory and neuropathic
pain until his untimely death in 2008. He established
standards for pain clinical trial methodology
and conducted some of the pivotal trials establishing
the efficacy of tricyclics for neuropathic pain.
In the late 1990s he began to conduct studies
on the genetics of pain.
A short appreciation of the life and work of Mitchell
Max will be given by Turo Nurmikko, Pain Relief Foundation,
Professor of Pain Science, University of Liverpool
and The Pain Research Institute, Liverpool.
2008
Complex Regional Pain Syndrome: What Causes it
and can it be Treated?
Ralf Baron, University of Kiel, Germany
IN HONOUR OF David, Niv, Tel Aviv, Israel
Professor Ralf Baronis Head of the Department
of Neurological Pain Research and Therapy, Christian
Albrechts University of Kiel, Germany. His main research
interest is in the pathophysiology and therapy of
neuropathic pain states. He is an associated editor
and reviewer for many scientific journals and has
received awards from the German Pain Society and
the German Neurological Society. He is a Management
Committee Member of the Neuropathic Pain Special
Interest Group (NeupSIG) of the IASP.
Dr David Niv was tragically shot and killed
in 2007 aged 56. He was the Director of the Multidisciplinary
Pain Control Unit & Pain Research Laboratory
at Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Israel. He was
one of the leading spokesmen in raising the profile
of Pain Science and Medicine. He was President of
The European Federation of IASP Chapters (EFIC) from
1999-2002 during which time he created the Europe
Against Pain initiative.
A short appreciation of the life and work of David
Niv was given by Chris Wells, from Liverpool, an
associate and friend of David Niv for many years.
2007
Persistent Pain Mechanisms: Molecular mechanisms
as a basis for therapy
Allan Basbaum, University of California San Francisco,
USA
IN HONOUR OF John Lloyd, Oxford, UK
Professor Allan Basbaum is a Neuroscientist
and Chairman of the Department of Anatomy at the
University of California at San Francisco. His research
interests are in the area of the neurobiology of
pain and its control. He is Editor-in-Chief of the
journal Pain. He was elected to the Institute of
Medicine in 2005 and the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences in 2003. In 2006 he was made a Fellow
of the Royal Society.
Dr John Lloyd was the founder of the Pain Relief
Unit in Oxford. Together with colleagues he published
several papers on cryoanalgesia for pain relief using
a cryosurgical probe. He was an Honorary Member of
the International Association for the Study of Pain
and Past President of the British Pain Society.
A short appreciation of the life and work of John
Lloyd will be given by Henry McQuay, Nuffield Professor
of Clinical Anaesthetics, University of Oxford and
The Pain Relief Unit at Churchill Hospital, Oxford.
2006
Prediction and Prevention of Disability in Chronic
Pain
Steven Linton, Örebro University, Sweden
IN HONOUR OF
Dame Cicely Saunders, London, UK
Professor Steven J Linton is professor
of clinical psychology at Örebro University
in Sweden. He is director of the Center for
Health and Medical Psychology (CHAMP). After
studying experimental psychology in the US
he completed his doctorate at Uppsala University.
His current research interests revolve around
pain, stress and insomnia. He is interested
in the effectiveness of early psychological
interventions.
Dame Cicely Saunders died in 2005 aged 87.
She was the founder of the modern hospice movement.
She was deeply religious and worked in various charitable
homes for the dying from the late 1940s. She eventually
studied medicine at St Thomas's in London. She founded
St Christopher's Hospice in 1967 where she eventually
died. Her books include Care of the Dying (1960);
The Living Idea (1981) and Watch with Me (2003).
A short appreciation of the life and work of Dame
Cicely Saunders will be given by Geoffrey Hanks ,
Professor of Palliative Medicine at the University
of Bristol.
2005
The Future of Pain Medicine
Sir Michael Bond, University of Glasgow, UK
IN HONOUR OF
Hans Kosterlitz, Aberdeen University, UK
Professor Sir Michael Bond is an emeritus professor
in the Department of Psychology at the University
of Glasgow. He is a past president of the International
Association for the Study of Pain (IASP). His research
interests are in the field of psychological and social
factors in the generation and maintenance of pain.
Professor Bond is a former Vice President and Administrative
Dean for the Faculty of Medicine at the University
of Glasgow. In 1995 he was made Knight Bachelor for
his services to medicine. He is a Fellow of the Royal
Society of Arts and a Fellow of the Royal Society
of Edinburgh (FRSE).
Professor Hans Kosterlitz died in
1996 at the age of 93. He was educated in
Germany where he studied medicine. In 1933,
with the advent of the Nazis, he came to
Britain and joined the staff of Aberdeen
University. He became Professor of Pharmacology
and Chemistry there in 1968. In 1975 in collaboration
with John Hughes, he discovered endogenous
opiates, previously discussed by Solomon
Snyder. They named these opiates enkephalins.
(Hughes J et al. Identification of two related pentapeptides
from the brain with potent opiate agonist activity.
Nature 258(5536): 577-80, 1975)
A short appreciation of the life and work of Hans
Kosterlitz will be given by Dr Alexander McKnight
who worked with Dr Kosterlitz in Aberdeen.
2004
Phantom Limbs and Body Image
V S Ramachandran, University of California San
Diego, USA
IN HONOUR OF Denise
Albe-Fessard, Paris, France
Professor V S Ramachandran is Director of the
Center for Brain & Cognition and professor in
the Psychology Department & Neurosciences Program
at the University of California, San Diego. His research
interests lay in neural mechanisms underlying human
perception, cognition and emotions. He is a fellow
of the Neurosciences Institute in La Jolla, California & a
Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Behavioural
Sciences at Stanford University, California. He gave
the BBC Reith Lecture in 2003. He is co-author of
the critically acclaimed book "Phantoms in the
Brain".
Dr Denise Albe-Fessard died in May
2003 at the age of 87. She was the first
President of the International Association
for the Study of Pain. She was a Chevalier
de la Légion d'Honneur and an Officier
de l'Ordre National du Mérite in her
native France.
A short appreciation of the life and work of Dr Albe-Fessard
was given by Dr David Bowsher from the Pain Research
Institute in Liverpool.
2003
Pain & Central Nervous System Reorganisation
Troels Jensen, University of Aarhus, Denmark
IN HONOUR OF Peter
Nathan, London, UK
Professor Troels Jensen was a professor in
the Department of Neurology and the Danish Pain Research
Center at the University of Aarhus. His research
interests are in the field of neuropathic pain mechanisms
and treatment. He was President-Elect of the IASP.
Dr Peter Nathan was an eminent neurologist.
He worked for many years at the National Hospital
for Nervous Diseases in Queen Square in London. His
main research interest was in the spinal cord and
pain, in particular cordotomy. He was a founding
member of the IASP and the Pain Society of Britain.
He died in 2002 aged 88.
An appreciation of his life and work will be given
by Dr Geoffrey Schott from the National Hospital
for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square London.
2002
Neural Mechanisms of Persistent Pain
Marshall Devor, Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
Israel
IN HONOUR OF Pat
Wall, University College, London, UK
Professor Marshall Devor is Chairman of the
Department of Cell and Aniaml Biology at the Institute
of Life Sciences at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
in Israel. His research interests are in the neurobiological
basis of neuropathic pain.
Professor Patrick Wall, FRS, was a Founding
Member of the IASP & the Brain Research Association
and Founding Editor of the Journal, Pain. Pat Wall
published "The Gate Control Theory of Pain" with
Ronald Melzack in the 1960's. He also edited "The
Textbook of Pain " with Ron Melzack. In 1989
he was made a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was
Emeritus Professor at Guys and St Thomas' Hospital
until his death in August 2001 aged 76.
An appreciation of his life and work was given by
Professor Maria Fitzgerald, from UCL, who worked
for many years with Pat Wall in London.
2001
Evidence Matters
Henry McQuay, Oxford Pain Relief Unit and Oxford
University, UK
IN HONOUR OF
John J Bonica, University of Washington, Seattle,
USA
Professor Henry McQuay was Professor of Pain
Relief at the University of Oxford in the UK and
a Consultant at the Pain Relief Unit at Churchill
Hospital, Oxford. He was a Councillor of the IASP
and Chair of the IASP Committee on Ethical Issues.
He is the author of many articles and books including "An
Evidence-Based Resource for Pain Relief". McQuay
HJ & Moore RA. Oxford: Oxford University press,
1998.
(www.jr2.ox.ac.uk/bandolier/)
Dr John Bonica was a Founder and Honorary Member
of the IASP. He was a pioneer in the field of pain
research. John Bonica received many honours including
the establishment, by the University of Washington,
of the John and Emma Bonica endowed Chair for Anaesthesiology
and Pain Research. John J Bonica died in September
1994.
An appreciation of his life and work was given by
Edmund Charlton, Consultant in Anaesthesia and Pain
Relief at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK, who worked with
John Bonica in Seattle.
2000
"No excuse for pain" - the place of opioids
in non-malignant pain.
Russell Portenoy, Beth Israel Medical Centre, New
York, USA
IN HONOUR OF Sam Lipton, The Pain Relief
Foundation &
The Walton Centre, Liverpool, UK
Professor Russell Portenoy was Chairman in
the Department of Pain Medicine & Palliative
Care at
Beth Israel Medical Centre in New York, USA. He was
the Secretary of the International Association of
Pain (IASP) and Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of
Pain and Symptom Management.
Sam Lipton was a co-founder of the Pain Relief
Foundation in Liverpool in the 1970s and the Director
of the Pain Clinic at Walton Centre for many years.
An appreciation of his life and work was given by
his colleague John Miles from the Pain Relief Foundation.
Sam Lipton died in 1994. |