Understanding and Living With Chronic Pain
Understanding and Living With Chronic Pain
Understanding and Living With Chronic Pain
Pain
Pierre Morin, MD, PhD
Basel
Medical Models
Bio-medical model
Social determinant model
Bio-psycho-social model
Psychodynamic model
Positive psychology (Seligman), Positive health
model (Antonovsky)
Indigenous model
Recovery/Self-management model
Process model (Mindell)
Bio-medical model
Environment
Psychology
Biologic predisposition
Disease
Illness
Clinical Outcome
Bio-psycho-social model
Environment
Psychosocialmodifiers
Biologic/predispositionDiseaseClinicalOutcome
Psychological
Illness
Psychodynamic model
Illness and disease have an adaptive
function. They are meaningful
processes that are embedded in a
persons individual and collective life
and environment. They are the best
solution so far and promote healing
and growth. Physiologic states are
metaphors for individual and social
processes.
Positive psychology/
Positive health model
What prevents us from getting ill physically and mentally?
What are the characteristics of people who stay healthy
despite adverse circumstances? What are the strengths
and virtues that act as buffers against illness? How do we
amplify and foster these strengths and virtues? Instead of
focusing on curing/treating pathologies positive
psychology/health sees health as a continuum and is
interested in the factors (resilience, sense of coherence,
meaningfulness) that give our lives purpose, allow us to
stay healthy and cope with our limited health.
Indigenous model
Relationship to Nature, the ancestors, the spirit
world is relevant for staying healthy.
Relationship dynamics are a relevant factor for
causing disease: jealousy, the evil eye, being
outcasted by the tribe etc
Recovery/Self-Management Model
I
Recovery is an individuals journey of
healing and transformation to live a
meaningful life in a community of his or
her choice while striving to achieve
maximum human potential.
Recovery/Self-Management Model
II
Clients have primary control over decisions
Based on concepts of strength and
empowerment
Provide education
Living with Symptoms instead of getting rid of
them
A meaningful life is possible despite
serious/chronic symptoms
Adaptation to issues of diversity
Recovery/Self-Management Model
III
Increasing knowledge about illness
Engaging in activities that promote
health
Coping more effectively and reducing
distress from symptoms
Reducing social exclusion
Increasing self-confidence
Pain
Pain/Chronic Pain
Definition
An unpleasant sensation and an
emotional experience associated with a
real or potential damage to tissue, or the
equivalent of such damage.
Pain without apparent biological value
that has persisted beyond the normal
tissue healing time (usually taken to be 3
months)
Names
Amplified Musculoskeletal Pain, Reflex
Neurovascular Dystrophy, Reflex Sympathetic
Dystrophy, Sympathetically Maintained Pain,
Fibromyalgia, Algodystrophy, Complex
Regional Pain Syndrome Types I and II,
Causalgia, Sudecks Atrophy, Shoulder-Hand
Syndrome, Repetitive Strain Injury, Plantar
Fasciitis, Localized or Diffuse Idiopathic
Musculoskeletal Pain, Neuropathic Pain,
Central Pain, Psychogenic Pain, Psychosomatic
Pain
Epidemiology/Prevalence/Impact
9 - 11% of the U.S. population suffer from moderate to
severe chronic pain.
Women are more likely to suffer chronic pain than men.
On average it is present almost 6 days in a typical week.
Only of chronic pain sufferers say their pain is pretty
much under control.
Chronic pain is the most common complaint made by
patients to their Primary Care Providers.
It accounts for an estimated $75-$100 billion a year in
the U.S. in lost productivity and health care costs.
Nociceptive Pain:
Pain that is a result of tissue irritation, impending
injury, or actual tissue injury sensed by pain receptors.
Pain receptors are the nerves which sense and respond
to parts of the body which suffer from damage. When
activated, they transmit pain signals (via the peripheral
nerves as well as the spinal cord) to the brain. The pain
is typically well localized, constant, and often with an
aching or throbbing quality. Visceral pain is the
subtype of nociceptive pain that involves the internal
organs. It tends to be episodic and poorly localized.
Neuropathic Pain:
Can occur as a result of injury or disease to the
nerve tissue itself. This can disrupt the ability
of the sensory nerves to transmit correct
information to the thalamus, and hence the
brain interprets painful stimuli even though
there is no obvious or known physiologic cause
for the pain. Neuropathic pain is the disease of
pain. It is not the sole definition for chronic
pain, but does meet its criteria.
Referred Pain:
Is a phenomenon used to describe pain
perceived at a site adjacent to or at a
distance from the site of an injury's
origin. One of the best examples of this is
during heart attack. Even though the
heart is directly affected the pain is often
felt in the neck, shoulders and back
rather than the chest.
Hyperalgesia:
Lowered pain threshold, which in one
form is caused by damage to pain
receptors in the body's soft tissues.
Conditioning studies have established
that it is possible to experience a learned
hyperalgesia.
Allodynia:
Meaning "other pain", is the perception of pain
caused by usually nonpainful stimuli, such as
touch or vibration. An example of allodynia is
when a person perceives light pressure or the
movement of clothes over the skin as painful,
whereas a healthy individual will not feel pain.
Several studies suggest that injury to the spinal
cord might lead to loss and re-distribution of
pain receptors and pain modulating neurons
leading to the new response.
Long-term Potentiation
Long-lasting enhancement in communication
between two neurons that results from
stimulating them simultaneously. Since neurons
communicate via chemical synapses, and
because memories are believed to be stored
within these synapses, LTP and its opposing
process, long-term depression, are widely
considered the major cellular mechanisms that
underlie learning and memory.
Fear-Avoidance Model
Regaining Ownership/Control
Chronic pain as a trauma that needs to
be re-conquered.
Integrating Painmaker and
Traumatizer
Like Native Americans used to inflict
themselves with a wound once they had
been wounded by an adversary.
Psychological Assessments
Pain Questionnaire/Inventory
Depression/Learned Helplessness
Anxiety Sensitivity (fear of anxiety-related bodily
sensations)
Multidisciplinary Pain
Treatment/Management
Medication/Pharmacotherapy
Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy
Psychology
Retraining the Nervous System
Alternative/Complementary Medicine
Interventional Medicine
Self-management/Education
Medication
Over the Counter Medication (Acetaminophen,
Tylenol, Paracetamol)
NSAID (Ibuprofen/Advil)
Narcotics/Opioids (Morphine, Methadone,
Oxycodone, Oxycontin, Fentanyl)
N-Type Ca-Channel Blocker (Sea snail venom)
Na-Channel Blockers (Antikonvulsant)
Vanilloid/Capsaicin Receptor Blockers (Chili
pepper)
Antidepressants
Ramachandran/Phantom
limb/Mirror box
A mirror box is a box with two mirrors in
the center (one facing each way) to help
alleviate pain.
The non-painful limb is projected onto
the hurting side in order to retrain the
brain, and thereby eliminate the learned
paralysis/pain.
Self-management
Allopathic Medicine
Complementary Medicine
Allostasis/Stress-management/Relaxation
Advocacy/Empowerment/Rank/Leadership
Education/Behavioral changes
Family/Peer/Community support
Psychology/Picking up the energy
(painmaker/traumatizer)
Health Disparity
Relative poverty
Disparity between the rich
and the poor: High gap correlates with
poor population health.
Life Expectancy:
Teen Birth:
Educational Opportunities:
Child Poverty:
Child Abuse Death Rates:
Child Injury Death Rates:
29
28
21
25
26
23
Rank
Rank reflects the underlying power differences
of the many hierarchies we use on a daily basis
to compare ourselves (Fuller, 2003).
Conscious or unconscious, social or personal
ability or power emerging from areas of sociocultural influence, personal psychology, and/or
spiritual ties (Mindell, 1995) .
Rank Dimensions
Social Rank
Psychological Rank
Spiritual/Transpersonal Rank
Contextual Rank
Social Rank
Depends on ones position in regard to
mainstream values in the areas of sociocultural influence like gender, sexual
orientation, age, class, health/disability,
religion, ethnic identity/race etc
Psychological Rank
Includes self-love, self-confidence and
self-knowledge. It also stresses good
relationships skills, high in-group status,
and a loving support network.
Contextual Rank
Derives from ones momentary roles in a
given situation: as a teacher, health care
provider, parent, bank teller etc...
Clinician Attitudes
Cultural/Societal
Attitudes
Cultural Metaphors
Blameworthy ill-health versus responsible
health
Health and illness as an individual process
Juvenile good-looking body equals
success; metaphor for fitness and
attractiveness and standard for social
acceptance and recognition
The body as a commodity
Clinician-Patient Relationship
Cultural competence/sensitivity
Rank awareness
Awareness of ones biases/stereotypes
Communication skills
Awareness of individual and social beliefs
Difficult/Complex Patient/Client
REFERENCES