Pain Management
What is Chronic Pain?
While acute pain is a normal sensation triggered in the nervous
system to alert you to possible injury and the need to take care of
yourself, chronic pain is different. Chronic pain persists. Pain signals
keep firing in the nervous system for weeks, months, even years. There
may have been an initial mishap -- sprained back, serious infection, or
there may be an ongoing cause of pain -- arthritis, cancer, ear
infection, but some people suffer chronic pain in the absence of any
past injury or evidence of body damage. Many chronic pain conditions
affect older adults. Common chronic pain complaints include headache,
low back pain, cancer pain, arthritis pain, neurogenic pain (pain
resulting from damage to the peripheral nerves or to the central nervous
system itself), and psychogenic pain (pain not due to past disease or
injury or any visible sign of damage inside or outside the nervous
system).
Is there any treatment?
Medications, acupuncture, local electrical stimulation, and brain
stimulation, as well as surgery, are some treatments for chronic pain.
Some physicians use placebos, which in some cases has resulted in a
lessening or elimination of pain. Psychotherapy, relaxation and
medication therapies, biofeedback, and behavior modification may also be
employed to treat chronic pain. Most low back pain can be treated
without surgery. Treatment involves using analgesics, reducing
inflammation, restoring proper function and strength to the back, and
preventing recurrence of the injury. Most patients with back pain
recover without residual functional loss. Patients should contact a
doctor if there is not a noticeable reduction in pain and inflammation
after 72 hours of self-care.
As soon as possible following trauma, patients should apply a cold pack
or a cold compress (such as a bag of ice or bag of frozen vegetables
wrapped in a towel) to the tender spot several times a day for up to 20
minutes. After 2 to 3 days of cold treatment, they should then apply
heat (such as a heating lamp or hot pad) for brief periods to relax
muscles and increase blood flow. Warm baths may also help relax muscles.
Patients should avoid sleeping on a heating pad, which can cause burns
and lead to additional tissue damage.
Bed rest — 1–2 days at most. Persons who continued their activities
without bed rest following onset of low back pain appeared to have
better back flexibility than those who rested in bed for a week. Other
studies suggest that bed rest alone may make back pain worse and can
lead to secondary complications such as depression, decreased muscle
tone, and blood clots in the legs. Patients should resume activities as
soon as possible. At night or during rest, patients should lie on one
side, with a pillow between the knees (some doctors suggest resting on
the back and putting a pillow beneath the knees).
Exercise may be the most effective way to speed recovery from low back
pain and help strengthen back and abdominal muscles. Maintaining and
building muscle strength is particularly important for persons with
skeletal irregularities. Doctors and physical therapists can provide a
list of gentle exercises that help keep muscles moving and speed the
recovery process. A routine of back-healthy activities may include
stretching exercises, swimming, walking, and movement therapy to improve
coordination and develop proper posture and muscle balance. Yoga is
another way to gently stretch muscles and ease pain. Any mild discomfort
felt at the start of these exercises should disappear as muscles become
stronger. But if pain is more than mild and lasts more than 15 minutes
during exercise, patients should stop exercising and contact a doctor.
Medications are often used to treat acute and chronic low back pain.
Effective pain relief may involve a combination of prescription drugs
and over-the-counter remedies. Patients should always check with a
doctor before taking drugs for pain relief. Certain medicines, even
those sold over the counter, are unsafe during pregnancy, may conflict
with other medications, may cause side effects including drowsiness, or
may lead to liver damage.
- Over-the-counter analgesics, including nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (aspirin, naproxen, and ibuprofen), are
taken orally to reduce stiffness, swelling, and inflammation and to
ease mild to moderate low back pain. Counter-irritants applied
topically to the skin as a cream or spray stimulate the nerve
endings in the skin to provide feelings of warmth or cold and dull
the sense of pain. Topical analgesics can also reduce inflammation
and stimulate blood flow. Many of these compounds contain
salicyclates, the same ingredient found in oral pain medications
containing aspirin.
- Anticonvulsants — drugs primarily used to treat seizures — may
be useful in treating certain types of nerve pain and may also be
prescribed with analgesics.
- Some antidepressants, particularly tricyclic antidepressants
such as amitryptalene and desipramine, have been shown to relieve
pain (independent of their effect on depression) and assist with
sleep. Antidepressants alter levels of brain chemicals to elevate
mood and dull pain signals. Many of the new antidepressants, such as
the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, are being studied for
their effectiveness in pain relief.
- Opioids such as codeine, oxycodone, hydrocodone, and morphine
are often prescribed to manage severe acute and chronic back pain
but should be used only for a short period of time and under a
physician’s supervision. Side effects can include drowsiness,
decreased reaction time, impaired judgment, and potential for
addiction. Many specialists are convinced that chronic use of these
drugs is detrimental to the back pain patient, adding to depression
and even increasing pain.
What is the prognosis?
Many people with chronic pain can be helped if they understand all
the causes of pain and the many and varied steps that can be taken to
undo what chronic pain has done. Scientists believe that advances in
neuroscience will lead to more and better treatments for chronic pain in
the years to come.
More Information
Click Here for common pain
management conditions.
Click Here for surgical pain management
options.
Click Here for non-surgical pain
management options.
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