|
How is Pain Treated?
The goal of pain management is to improve function, enabling
individuals to work, attend school, or participate in other
day-to-day activities. Patients and their physicians have
a number of options for the treatment of pain; some are more
effective than others. Sometimes, relaxation and the use of
imagery as a distraction provide relief. These methods can
be powerful and effective, according to those who advocate
their use. Whatever the treatment regime, it is important
to remember that pain is treatable. The following
treatments are among the most common.
Acetaminophen is the basic ingredient found
in Tylenol® and its many generic equivalents. It is sold
over the counter, in a prescription-strength preparation,
and in combination with codeine (also by prescription).
Acupuncture dates back 2,500 years and involves
the application of needles to precise points on the body.
It is part of a general category of healing called traditional
Chinese or Oriental medicine. Acupuncture remains controversial
but is quite popular and may one day prove to be useful for
a variety of conditions as it continues to be explored by
practitioners, patients, and investigators.
Analgesic refers to the class of drugs that
includes most painkillers, such as aspirin, acetaminophen,
and ibuprofen. The word analgesic is derived from ancient
Greek and means to reduce or stop pain. Nonprescription or
over-the-counter pain relievers are generally used for mild
to moderate pain. Prescription pain relievers, sold through
a pharmacy under the direction of a physician, are used for
more moderate to severe pain.
Anticonvulsants are used for the treatment
of seizure disorders but are also sometimes prescribed for
the treatment of pain. Carbamazepine in particular is used
to treat a number of painful conditions, including trigeminal
neuralgia. Another antiepileptic drug, gabapentin, is being
studied for its pain-relieving properties, especially as a
treatment for neuropathic pain.
Antidepressants are sometimes used for the
treatment of pain and, along with neuroleptics and lithium,
belong to a category of drugs called psychotropic drugs. In
addition, anti-anxiety drugs called benzodiazepines also act
as muscle relaxants and are sometimes used as pain relievers.
Physicians usually try to treat the condition with analgesics
before prescribing these drugs.
Antimigraine drugs include the triptans-
sumatriptan (Imitrex®), naratriptan (Amerge®), and
zolmitriptan (Zomig®)-and are used specifically for migraine
headaches. They can have serious side effects in some people
and therefore, as with all prescription medicines, should
be used only under a doctor's care.
Aspirin may be the most widely used pain-relief
agent and has been sold over the counter since 1905 as a treatment
for fever, headache, and muscle soreness.
Biofeedback is used for the treatment of
many common pain problems, most notably headache and back
pain. Using a special electronic machine, the patient is trained
to become aware of, to follow, and to gain control over certain
bodily functions, including muscle tension, heart rate, and
skin temperature. The individual can then learn to effect
a change in his or her responses to pain, for example, by
using relaxation techniques. Biofeedback is often used in
combination with other treatment methods, generally without
side effects. Similarly, the use of relaxation techniques
in the treatment of pain can increase the patient's feeling
of well-being.
Capsaicin is a chemical found in chili peppers
that is also a primary ingredient in pain-relieving creams.
Chemonucleolysis is a treatment in which
an enzyme, chymopapain, is injected directly into a herniated
lumbar disc in an effort to dissolve material around the disc,
thus reducing pressure and pain. The procedure's use is extremely
limited, in part because some patients may have a life-threatening
allergic reaction to chymopapain.
Chiropractic refers to hand manipulation
of the spine, usually for relief of back pain, and is a treatment
option that continues to grow in popularity among many people
who simply seek relief from back disorders. It has never been
without controversy, however. Chiropractic's usefulness as
a treatment for back pain is, for the most part, restricted
to a select group of individuals with uncomplicated acute
low back pain who may derive relief from the massage component
of the therapy.
Cognitive-behavioral therapy involves a
wide variety of coping skills and relaxation methods to help
prepare for and cope with pain. It is used for postoperative
pain, cancer pain, and the pain of childbirth.
Counseling can give a patient suffering
from pain much needed support, whether it is derived from
family, group, or individual counseling. Support groups can
provide an important adjunct to drug or surgical treatment.
Psychological treatment can also help patients learn about
the physiological changes produced by pain.
COX-2 inhibitors may be effective for individuals
with arthritis. For many years scientists have wanted to develop
a drug that works as well as morphine but without its negative
side effects. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
work by blocking two enzymes, cyclooxygenase-1 and cyclooxygenase-2,
both of which promote production of hormones called prostaglandins,
which in turn cause inflammation, fever, and pain. The newer
COX-2 inhibitors primarily block cyclooxygenase-2 and are
less likely to have the gastrointestinal side effects sometimes
produced by NSAIDs.
In 1999, the Food and Drug Administration approved a COX-2
inhibitor-celecoxib-for use in cases of chronic pain. The
long-term effects of all COX-2 inhibitors are still being
evaluated, especially in light of new information suggesting
that these drugs may increase the risk of heart attack and
stroke. Patients taking any of the COX-2 inhibitors should
review their drug treatment with their doctors.
Electrical stimulation, including transcutaneous
electrical stimulation (TENS), implanted electric nerve stimulation,
and deep brain or spinal cord stimulation, is the modern-day
extension of age-old practices in which the nerves of muscles
are subjected to a variety of stimuli, including heat or massage.
Electrical stimulation, no matter what form, involves a major
surgical procedure and is not for everyone, nor is it 100
percent effective. The following techniques each require specialized
equipment and personnel trained in the specific procedure
being used:
- TENS uses tiny electrical pulses,
delivered through the skin to nerve fibers, to cause changes
in muscles, such as numbness or contractions. This in turn
produces temporary pain relief. There is also evidence that
TENS can activate subsets of peripheral nerve fibers that
can block pain transmission at the spinal cord level, in much
the same way that shaking your hand can reduce pain.
- Peripheral nerve stimulation uses
electrodes placed surgically on a carefully selected area
of the body. The patient is then able to deliver an electrical
current as needed to the affected area, using an antenna and
transmitter.
- Spinal cord stimulation uses electrodes
surgically inserted within the epidural space of the spinal
cord. The patient is able to deliver a pulse of electricity
to the spinal cord using a small box-like receiver and an
antenna taped to the skin.
- Deep brain or intracerebral stimulation
is considered an extreme treatment and involves surgical stimulation
of the brain, usually the thalamus. It is used for a limited
number of conditions, including severe pain, central pain
syndrome, cancer pain, phantom limb pain, and other neuropathic
pains.
Exercise has come to be a prescribed part
of some doctors' treatment regimes for patients with pain.
Because there is a known link between many types of chronic
pain and tense, weak muscles, exercise-even light to moderate
exercise such as walking or swimming-can contribute to an
overall sense of well-being by improving blood and oxygen
flow to muscles. Just as we know that stress contributes to
pain, we also know that exercise, sleep, and relaxation can
all help reduce stress, thereby helping to alleviate pain.
Exercise has been proven to help many people with low back
pain. It is important, however, that patients carefully follow
the routine laid out by their physicians.
Hypnosis, first approved for medical use
by the American Medical Association in 1958, continues to
grow in popularity, especially as an adjunct to pain medication.
In general, hypnosis is used to control physical function
or response, that is, the amount of pain an individual can
withstand. How hypnosis works is not fully understood. Some
believe that hypnosis delivers the patient into a trance-like
state, while others feel that the individual is simply better
able to concentrate and relax or is more responsive to suggestion.
Hypnosis may result in relief of pain by acting on chemicals
in the nervous system, slowing impulses. Whether and how hypnosis
works involves greater insight-and research-into the mechanisms
underlying human consciousness.
Ibuprofen is a member of the aspirin family
of analgesics, the so-called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (see below). It is sold over the counter and also comes
in prescription-strength preparations.
Low-power lasers have been used occasionally
by some physical therapists as a treatment for pain, but like
many other treatments, this method is not without controversy.
Magnets are increasingly popular with athletes
who swear by their effectiveness for the control of sports-related
pain and other painful conditions. Usually worn as a collar
or wristwatch, the use of magnets as a treatment dates back
to the ancient Egyptians and Greeks. While it is often dismissed
as quackery and pseudoscience by skeptics, proponents offer
the theory that magnets may effect changes in cells or body
chemistry, thus producing pain relief.
Marijuana as a painkiller, or by its Latin
name, cannabis, continues to remain highly controversial.
In the eyes of many individuals campaigning on its behalf,
marijuana rightfully belongs with other pain remedies. In
fact, for many years, it was sold under highly controlled
conditions in cigarette form by the Federal government for
just that purpose.
In 1997, the National Institutes of Health held a workshop
to discuss research on the possible therapeutic uses for smoked
marijuana. Panel members from a number of fields reviewed
published research and heard presentations from pain experts.
The panel members concluded that, because there are too few
scientific studies to prove marijuana's therapeutic utility
for certain conditions, additional research is needed. There
is evidence, however, that receptors to which marijuana binds
are found in many brain regions that process information that
can produce pain.
Narcotics (see Opioids, below).
Nerve blocks employ the use of drugs, chemical
agents, or surgical techniques to interrupt the relay of pain
messages between specific areas of the body and the brain.
There are many different names for the procedure, depending
on the technique or agent used. Types of surgical nerve blocks
include neurectomy; spinal dorsal, cranial, and trigeminal
rhizotomy; and sympathectomy, also called sympathetic blockade.
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)
(including aspirin and ibuprofen) are widely prescribed and
sometimes called non-narcotic or non-opioid analgesics. They
work by reducing inflammatory responses in tissues. Many of
these drugs irritate the stomach and for that reason are usually
taken with food. Although acetaminophen may have some anti-inflammatory
effects, it is generally distinguished from the traditional
NSAIDs.
Opioids are derived from the poppy plant
and are among the oldest drugs known to humankind. They include
codeine and perhaps the most well-known narcotic of all, morphine.
Morphine can be administered in a variety
of forms, including a pump for patient self-administration.
Opioids have a narcotic effect, that is, they induce sedation
as well as pain relief, and some patients may become physically
dependent upon them. For these reasons, patients given opioids
should be monitored carefully; in some cases stimulants may
be prescribed to counteract the sedative side effects. In
addition to drowsiness, other common side effects include
constipation, nausea, and vomiting.
Physical therapy and rehabilitation date
back to the ancient practice of using physical techniques
and methods, such as heat, cold, exercise, massage, and manipulation,
in the treatment of certain conditions. These may be applied
to increase function, control pain, and speed the patient
toward full recovery.
Placebos offer some individuals pain relief
although whether and how they have an effect is mysterious
and somewhat controversial. Placebos are inactive substances,
such as sugar pills, or harmless procedures, such as saline
injections or sham surgeries, generally used in clinical studies
as control factors to help determine the efficacy of active
treatments. Although placebos have no direct effect on the
underlying causes of pain, evidence from clinical studies
suggests that many pain conditions such as migraine headache,
back pain, post-surgical pain, rheumatoid arthritis, angina,
and depression sometimes respond well to them. This positive
response is known as the placebo effect, which is defined
as the observable or measurable change that can occur in patients
after administration of a placebo. Some experts believe the
effect is psychological and that placebos work because the
patients believe or expect them to work. Others say placebos
relieve pain by stimulating the brain's own analgesics and
setting the body's self-healing forces in motion. A third
theory suggests that the act of taking placebos relieves stress
and anxiety-which are known to aggravate some painful conditions-and,
thus, cause the patients to feel better. Still, placebos are
considered controversial because by definition they are inactive
and have no actual curative value.
R.I.C.E.-Rest, Ice,
Compression, and Elevation-are
four components prescribed by many orthopedists, coaches,
trainers, nurses, and other professionals for temporary muscle
or joint conditions, such as sprains or strains. While many
common orthopedic problems can be controlled with these four
simple steps, especially when combined with over-the-counter
pain relievers, more serious conditions may require surgery
or physical therapy, including exercise, joint movement or
manipulation, and stimulation of muscles.
Surgery, although not always an option,
may be required to relieve pain, especially pain caused by
back problems or serious musculoskeletal injuries. Surgery
may take the form of a nerve block or it may involve an operation
to relieve pain from a ruptured disc. Surgical procedures
for back problems include discectomy or,
when microsurgical techniques are used, microdiscectomy,
in which the entire disc is removed; laminectomy,
a procedure in which a surgeon removes only a disc fragment,
gaining access by entering through the arched portion of a
vertebra; and spinal fusion, a procedure where the entire
disc is removed and replaced with a bone graft. In a spinal
fusion, the two vertebrae are then fused together.
Although the operation can cause the spine to stiffen, resulting
in lost flexibility, the procedure serves one critical purpose:
protection of the spinal cord. Other operations for pain include
rhizotomy, in which a nerve close to the
spinal cord is cut, and cordotomy, where
bundles of nerves within the spinal cord are severed. Cordotomy
is generally used only for the pain of terminal cancer that
does not respond to other therapies. Another operation for
pain is the dorsal root entry zone operation,
or DREZ, in which spinal neurons corresponding to the patient's
pain are destroyed surgically. Because surgery can result
in scar tissue formation that may cause additional problems,
patients are well advised to seek a second opinion before
proceeding. Occasionally, surgery is carried out with electrodes
that selectively damage neurons in a targeted area of the
brain. These procedures rarely result in long-term pain relief,
but both physician and patient may decide that the surgical
procedure will be effective enough that it justifies the expense
and risk. In some cases, the results of an operation are remarkable.
For example, many individuals suffering from trigeminal neuralgia
who are not responsive to drug treatment have had great success
with a procedure called microvascular decompression, in which
tiny blood vessels are surgically separated from surrounding
nerves.
(Source: "Pain: Hope Through Research," NINDS.
Publication date December 2001.)
|