Stephen C Brown
Associate Professor
Department of Anesthesia
University of Toronto
Canada
Biography
Dr. Brown’s pediatric chronic pain research is focused on the etiology and treatment of complex chronic pain in children and adolescents. His initial thrust was the impact of developmental factors and gender on pain sensitivity, as funded through his CIHR NET grant on “Gender Differences in Child Development: Vulnerability to Chronic Pain”. Critical lines of research address the age and gender-based prevalence rates for varied chronic pain problems through clinic and population based epidemiological studies, the long term outcomes and economic impact of childhood chronic pain, the specific physical deficits (from periphery to brain) associated with varied pain conditions that differentially affect children and adolescents using quantitative sensory testing studies and functional MRI procedures, central mechanisms that differentiate patient and normative cohorts, and randomized controlled trials to determine treatment efficacy. He received approval from Health Canada to conduct a randomized controlled trial of the two main adjuvant analgesics used to treat neuropathic pain in children (neither treatment has been evaluated in a pediatric trial) and for which he is listed as principal investigator. Dr. Brown was also the principal on-site investigator for our Children’s Sedation Headset that is funded by a NIH grant. This device allows administration of a controlled mixture of nitrous oxide and oxygen and the ability to play a video game while the child undergoes an invasive procedure. These research initiatives enabled Dr. Brown to be appointed as a Project Director of the Neurosciences and Mental Health Program, the Research Institute, The Hospital for Sick Children.
Research Interest
Dr. Brown’s pediatric chronic pain research is focused on the etiology and treatment of complex chronic pain in children and adolescents.