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FACIAL PAIN-NON ODONTOGENIC CAUSES
         Dr. A.V. Srinivasan
         MD.,DM.,Ph.D .,
         D.Sc (HON).F.I.A.N.,F.A.AN.
         Emeritus professor of Tamilnadu
         Dr. M.G.R Medical University.
         Adjunct Professor –IIT, Chennai
         Former Head, Institute of Neurology-
         Madras medical college.
         Ragas Dental college 07-08-2011
Chronic Pain


             Understanding, Impact and
                    Awareness



We learn by thinking and the quality of the learning outcome
        is determined by the quality of our thoughts
                                           R.B. Schmeck
“Pain May be Inevitable, but Misery is Optional”

                                             Dee Malchow




Pain constitutes nearly 40% of the total of patient visits to doctors. 1




     “ByNature All Men/W en are alike but
                        om
         byEducation widelydifferent”
        1 Mäntyselkä et al. Pain as a reason to visit the doctor: a study in Finnish primary health care. Pain. 2001 Jan;89(2-3):175-80.
                                  - Chinese
   In 2001, Barry Furrow wrote “Pain is undertreated” in the American health-care
    system at all levels.2
   The term "opiophobia" has been coined to describe this remarkable clinical
    aversion to the proper use of opioids to control pain.
   The possible reasons for health-care providers' failures to properly manage pain
    are many;
        Occasional lack of knowledge about appropriate treatment choices for pain
         management
        A reflection of a Culture hostile to drug use
        Threats of legal action.
        Worry about tolerance and addiction and other adverse drug effects
        Something as trivial as the lack of insurance cover, can lead to patients
         suffering unnecessary pain as a result.


     Every thing should be made as simple as possible; but not
                             simpler
   Despite an essentially stoic and less demanding Indian patient; the
    obligation to manage pain comes to the fore not only to complete the
    perfection of a clinicians management.
   But also, it is an independent entity with physical and psychological
    components that in adherence to best practices can neither be ignored
    nor treated such that adverse effects eclipse the malady.
   This importance of pain management is further increased when
    benefits for the patient are realized,
        Early mobilization which tends to prevent the more dangerous
         complication of a deep vein thrombosis;
        Shortening hospital stay
        Reducing costs

            Speak obligingly even if you cannot oblige
   In late 2000, US Congress passed into law a
    provision, which the president signed , that
    declared the 10 year period beginning Jan 1 st
    2001, as the Decade of Pain Control and
    Research.

   The American Pain Society has actively suppor ted
    the Decade of Pain Control Research, and it has
    been a focal point for the development of
    numerous programs to advance awareness and
    treatment of pain and funding for research.
              Neuronal damage, including that of
                   neuronal cell membrane
•   Pain is always a subjective experience
•   Everyone learns the meaning of “pain” through experiences usually
    related to injuries in early life
•   As an unpleasant sensation it becomes an emotional experience
•   Pain is a significant stress physically, emotionally


                                   The International Association for the
                                   Safety of Pain (IASP) defines pain an
                                   unpleasant sensory and emotional
                                   experience associated with actual or
                                   potential tissue damage, or described
                                   in terms of such damage, or both.

                Develop the heart; art comes automatically
   Organic vs. psychogenic
   Acute vs. chronic
   Malignant or benign
   Continuous or episodic



Perceiving Pain
•     Algogenic substances – chemicals released at the site of the
      injury
•     Nociceptors – afferent neurons that carry pain messages
•     Referred pain – pain that is perceived as if it were coming
      from somewhere else in the body

                     Symptoms vary depending on the
                  location of occlusion and the extent of
                         the spared collateral flow
ACUTE                       CHRONIC
Function                To warn               None (destructive)

Etiology            Usually Clear              Complex/obscure

Pt. Mood              Anxiety/fear             Depression/anger

MD impact              Comforting             Frustrating/draining


Role of Rx            Control/cure          Improve function/QOL


             Knowledge without action is useless;
             Action without knowledge is foolish
Types of Pain
                                            Types of Pain




                                                 (Psychogenic)
                                                (Psychogenic)
                 Pain arising from
                 Pain arising from                                             Pain arising from
                                                                              Pain arising from
                    pain receptors
                   pain receptors          Pain with NO apparent cause
                                          Pain with NO apparent cause
                                                                                Nervous system
                                                                               Nervous system
                  [Nociceptive Pain]
                 [Nociceptive Pain]          (e.g. Low back pain or some
                                            (e.g. Low back pain or some        [Neuropathic Pain]
                                                                              [Neuropathic Pain]
                                                 pelvic pain in women)
                                                pelvic pain in women)




                                                                                                 Peripheral
                                                                                                Peripheral
                                                                      Central
                                                                      Central
Superficical / /Somatic
Superficical Somatic             Deep / /Visceral
                                 Deep Visceral
                                                              (Brain and Spinal cord)
                                                                                            (Peripheral nervous
                                                                                           (Peripheral nervous
                                                             (Brain and Spinal cord)               system)
                                                                                                  system)




          Love is selfishness and selfishness is lovelessness
Nociceptive descriptors             Neuropathic descriptors

      Cramping, tender                          Shooting

       Gnawing, heavy                         Hot-burning

             Aching                               Sharp

            Splitting                           Stabbing

Teachers are reservoirs from which, through the process of education, the
                     students draw the water of life
IASP (International Association for the Study of Pain) expert multi-axial classification of chronic pain
    Axis I:           Anatomical location
    Axis II:          Systems
    Axis III:         Temporal Characteristics (intermittent, constant, etc.)
    Axis IV:          Patient’s Statement of Duration/ Intensity / severity
    Axis V:           Etiology

    Example:

       Mild post-herpetic neuralgia of T5 or T 6; 6 months ’ duration =
         303.22e

       Axis I:         Thoracic region
       Axis II:        Ner vous system (central, peripheral, or autonomic); physical
                                disturbance/dysfunction
       Axis III:       Continuous or nearly continuous, fluctuating severity
       Axis IV:        Mild severity of 1 to 6 months
       Axis V:         Trauma, operation, burns, infective, parasitic (one of these)

                          Learn to adapt, adjust and accommodate
                   Learn to give, not to take and learn to serve not to rule
Chronic pain has a
Hostility




                                Depression
                                                                                                               psycho-social component
                                                                                                               that must be dealt with
                                             Psychological Factors                                             before depression


                                                                     Pathological Process
                                                                                                               becomes a part of the
Loneliness




                                                                                            Physical Factors
               Social Factors




                                                                                                               clinical picture. Chronic
                                  Anxiety




                                                                                                               pain should be recognized
                                                                                                               as a multi-factorial disease
                                                                                                               state requiring intervention
                                                                                                               at many levels.


                                             TIME

             Science is below the mind; Spirituality is beyond the mind
   Chronic pain has high co-morbidity
         Depression
         Anxiety disorders
         Sleep disorders


      All diminish function and quality of life
      Addressing these issues is essential to optimal pain
       management


Give us the GRACE to accept with serenitythe things that cannot be changed the COURAGE
   to change the things that should be changed and the W ISDOM to know the difference
   Chronic pain is NOT a normal part of aging.
   Emotions play a key role in painful experience
   Pain sounds a warning, signaling damage to tissues, and has survival value so pain receptors do not
    adapt to prolonged stimulation and pain sensation may intensify as pain thresholds are lowered by
    continued stimulation.
   The 19th Century viewed pain as a solely physiological entity with two theories dominating – the
    “specificity” & the “summation” theories. 8
   Paradigm Shift:
        Pain perception impulses are modified by ascending and by descending pain-suppressing
         systems activated by various environmental and psychological factors.
        1965 Melzack & Wall: Gate Theory of Pain marked a turning point in understanding transmission
         and modulation of nociceptive signals, and recognition of pain as a psychophysiological
         phenomenon.
   The concept of Neuroplasticity was recognized and accepted adding dynamism to neuronal & brain
    structure with neuroimaging of the central nervous system in three domains; anatomical, functional,
    and chemical imaging helping measure changes in chronic pain.
   Taken together these three domains have changed our thinking on pain; now considered an altered
    brain state in which there may be altered functional connections or systems and components of
    degenerative aspects of the CNS. 9



                 Hate screeches, fear squeals; conceits trumpets
                                  but love since lullabies
A bad teacher complains;
A good teacher explains;
The best teacher inspires;
   Trauma/ injury initiates immediate
                                      nerve impulses to brain
                                     Injury to cells result in chemical
                                      release
                                              H+
                                              K+
                                              Substance P
                                              Bradykinin
                                              5HT
                                              Phospholipids ⇒Prostaglandins
                                     Blood vessels leak resulting in
                                      inflammation
                                     Stimulate C-fibres (slow response)




Reputation is made in a moment; character is built in a life time
Ascending Tracts          Descending Tracts

                                   Cortex


                            Thalamus

                                  Midbrain




                                      Pons




                                  Medulla


(Brookoff, 2000)
                                 Spinal Cord
   Αδ ( A delta)
              Myelinated
              Fast conductors
              Gentle pressure and pain
    Αβ (A beta)
              Thinner – but still
               myelinated
              Fast conductors
              Heavy pressure &temp
    C - very thin
              Slow conductors
              PAIN, Pressure, temp &
               chemicals



Character gets you out of bed commitment moves you to action faith, hope and
                    Discipline follow through to completion
   In chronic pain, the nervous system remodels
    continuously in response to repeated pain signals
       ner ves become hypersensitive to pain
       ner ves become resistant to anti-nociceptive
        system
   If untreated, pain signals will continue even after
    injury resolves
   Chronic pain signals become embedded in the
    central nervous system

It is the providence of the knowledge to speak and it is the
          privilege of the wisdom to listen - Hodly’s
Pain-Sensing System in the
      Malfunction in Chronic Pain



                                                      Acute pain:
      Pain                                            Pain-sensing signals are
                                                      initiated in response to a
     Sensing                                          stimulus
                                                        • They elicit a pain-
In chronic pain,                                           relieving response
pain signals are
generated without
physiologic                                           Chronic pain:
significance
                                                      Pain signals are generated
                                                      for no reason and may be
                                                      intensified
                                                        • Pain-relieving
                                                          mechanisms may be
                                                          defective or deactivated


 )
               Opinion is ultimately determined by the feelings
                           and not by the intellect
     Reticulospinal fibers from raphe nuclei project to dorsal horn of spinal cord and
      release serotonin which stimulates interneurons to release enkephalin

     Enkephalin inhibits transmission of pain and temperature signals in second
      order neurons

     Reticulospinal fibers from locus coruleus also project to dorsal horn of spinal
      cord and release norepinephrine which inhibits pain and temperature signals by
      an unknown mechanism

     Mental illnesses such as depression decrease serotonin and norepinephrine
      and lower pain thresholds while antidepressant drugs and therapies (e.g.,
      exercise) which increase serotonin and norepinephrine levels raise pain
      thresholds


    A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely re
                        arranging their prejudices
                                                        W. James
   Inferred from characteristics, etiology or pathophysiology
   Types
       Nociceptive
       Neuropathic
       Idiopathic
   Therapeutic implications




        Opinion is ultimately determined by the feelings
                     and not by the intellect
Presumably results from ongoing activation of primary
afferent neurons responding to noxious stimuli
     Pain consistent with degree of tissue injury
     Described as aching, squeezing, stabbing, throbbing
     Subtypes:
          Somatic: related to activation of somatic af ferent
           neurons
          Visceral: related to activation of visceral af ferent
           neurons
    T T
     he ruth is fear and immorality are two of the greatest inhibitors of
                          Performance to progress
   Initiated by a primary lesion in the nervous system; believed to be
    sustained by aberrant somatosensory processing in the peripheral or
    central nervous system
   Independent of obvious ongoing nociceptive activation
   Burning, shooting, electrical quality; may be aching, throbbing, sharp
   Subtypes:
        Presumed “central generator”
             deaf ferentation pain (central pain, phantom pain)
             Sympathetically -maintained pain
        Presumed “peripheral generator”
             Polyneuropathies and mononeuropathies
A true com itm is a heart felt prom to y
          m ent                    ise   ourself fromwhich y will not back down
                                                            ou
                                       -
                             D. Mcnally
Idiopathic Pain
   Usually exists in the absence of an identifiable physical or
    psychologic pathology that could account for pain
   Uncommon in patients with progressive illness

Psychogenic Pain
   Presents positive evidence of a predominant psychologic
    contribution and may be labeled with a specific psychiatric
    diagnosis


               Serious, sincere, systematic studies,
                  surely secure supreme success
   Greater understanding of the pathophysiology underlying chronic
    pain syndromes
   Scientific breakthroughs in molecular biology; insight into pain at
    the molecular level
   Advances in drug therapy (drug delivery technologies)
   Multimodal therapy
   Multidisciplinary teams, shared decision-making that includes
    patients
   Patients’ rights movement



          Why is thought, being the secretion of the brain,
         more wonderful than gravity, a property of matter?
Progress in Chronic Pain Management:

       Therapeutic Modalities for
       Chronic Pain Management
                 Assessment

   God is a comedian performing before an audience
                that is afraid to laugh
“Describing pain only in terms of its
 intensity is like describing music only in
 terms of its loudness”

         “Men of Genius Adm  ired:
          Men of W ealth envied
       wom of power feared but only
          en
       wom of character are trusted”
          en
                                A- Friedman
   Characterize the pain
   Characterize the disease, relationship between
    pain and disease and potentially treatable
    etiologies
   Clarify syndromes and infer pathophysiology
   Determine need for urgent therapy
   Identify other needs
   Develop a therapeutic strategy


The word shall perish not for lack of wonders but lack of wonder
Components
 History: temporal features, intensity, topography, quality,

    exacerbating/alleviating factors
   Physical Exam: determine existence of underlying pathology
   Lab and Radiographic Tests: appropriate to pain syndrome

Assessment Tools
   Pain Intensity Scales: VAS, NAS, “faces” scale
   Multidimensional Pain Measures: Brief Pain Inventory, McGill
    Pain Questionnaire


         In any field, find the strangest thing and explore it
• Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)
                          No pain      ----------------------------------- Worst pain
• Numerical Rating Scale
                               0 ------------------------------------- 10
                                                                                      Worst pain
                          No pain
                                                                                      imaginable
• Categorical Scale
                        None (0)       Mild (1 – 4)       Moderate (5 – 6)     Severe (7 – 10)

• Pain Faces Scale


                  0                2               4               6              8               10
                 No          Hurts just a    Hurts a little    Hurts even    Hurts a whole   Hurts as much
                 hurt         little bit      bit more           more             lot         as you can
                                                                                                imagine
• Brief Pain Inventory       Shade areas of worst pain. Put an X on area that hurts most




      There are sixty trillion cells in the human body
Progress in Chronic Pain Management

 Therapeutic Modalities for Chronic
          Pain Management
             Treatment
    Pharmacotherapy (Analgesics)
       Non-opioids
       Adjuvant Analgesics
             Antidepressants
             Anticonvulsants
        Opioids
    Rehabilitative Approaches
    Psychologic Interventions
    Anesthesiological Approaches
    Neurostimulatory Techniques
    Surgery
    Complementary/Alternative Approaches
    Lifestyle Changes


    Baby hears 30,000 cycles / sec, teenage boy hears 20,000 and
                          old hears 4,000 cycles / sec
   Best evidence: TCAs
       Inhibit both NA and 5-HT reuptake

   TCAs are superior to SSRIs in pain management
   TCAs are superior to the anticonvulsant
   There is no consensus regarding which of the many TCA
    derivatives is most effective.
   The choice of TCA is therefore dictated largely by adverse
    effects


             There are sixty trillion cells in the human body
“Motivation is the Spark that lights
    the Fire of Knowledge and
fuels the engine of Accomplishment”
   Major reason for seeking medical care.

     90% is vasculr headache.

     10% is mixture of inflammation,traction or
      dilatation of pain sensitive structure.

A true commitment is a heart felt promise to yourself from which you will not
                                 back down
                                              - D. Mcnally
    Pain
    Referred pain
         Pattern of referred pain




    Success in life is a matter not so much of talent and opportunity
                 as of concentration and perseverance
                                                            - C.W. Wendte
   History
                 Hx of present illness
                 Past medical hx
                 Family hx
                 Social hx
   Physical examination


We possess by nature the factors out of which personality can be made, and to
organize them into effective personal life is every man’s primary responsibility
                                                         - Harry Emerson Fosdick
   Clinical features suggesting serious cause
       Crescendo
       Early morning
       Vomiting
       Fever
       Seizures & other neurological symptomes
       Worst headache in my life
       Known malignancy
       Tenderness
Typical Neuralgias
1) Trigeminal neuralgia
  •   Characterized by recurring paroxysmal
      severe pain, brief duration (seconds) in the
      territor y of the trigeminal ner ve,
      spontaneously or initiated by chewing,
      talking, touching the af fected side of the
      face.
  •   Unknown aetiology, an ar terial loop pushing
      on the sensor y root in the posterior fossa.
  •   Females af fected more than males
  •   Analgesics, surger y, destruction of the
      sensor y neuron, division of ner ve root.

  “ He who cannot forgive others destroy the bridge over which he
                                        s
               him m pass”
                    self ust              - Annoy
Typical Neuralgias
2) Glossophar yngeal neuralgia
  • Unknown cause
  • Equal both sexes
  • Severe, sudden episodes of pain in
    the tonsil region one side only,
    ipsilateral ear.
  • Pain - severe for 1-2 hours, recur
    daily
  • Treated like trigeminalthere is a
     In all of us, even in good men,
      wild - beast nature which peers out in sleep
Typical Neuralgias
3) Sluder’s neuralgia and Vidian
 neuralgia
 • Intractable pain in the nose, eye,
   cheek and lower jaw.
 • Could be due to lesion of the
   sphenopalatine ganglion, or vidian
   ner ve.
 • Analgesics, vidian neurectomy

  The art of medicine is caring for the heart of the patient
   Posttraumatic neuralgia
           Neuroma
           Parietal & occipital
           90% recover y




                Experience can be defined as
            yesterday’s answer to today’s problems
Atypical facial pain
   Pain felt over the cheek, nose, upper
    lip or lower jaw
   Usually bilaterally symmetrical
   Aching, shooting, burning,
    accompanied by reddening of the skin
    and lacrimation or watering of the nose
   Lasts for hours, days or weeks
   Psychological consultation, analgesics


        The sign wasn’t placed there
         By the Big Printer in the sky
Intracranial lesions
 1) Central lesions
    •   Tumours of the brain stem, M.S.,
        thrombotic lesions, metastasis, occult
        naso-phar yngeal ca.
    •   No precipitant, sensor y loss.
 2) Post herpetic neuralgia
    •   Herpes zoster may af fect trigeminal
        ner ve ganglion
    •   Vesicular rash covers one division
        commonly the 1 st with severe pain.

It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking,
          that I am troubled withal   - Shakespeare
Extracranial lesions
1) Sinus disease
  •   Infective and neoplastic lesions of the
      paranasal sinus.
  •   Facial pain & dental pain, loss teeth.
  •   Clinical suspicion.
  •   Treatment
2) Dental neuralgia
  •   Dental carries
  •   Dental extraction
3) Temporomandibular joint pain


       Memory, Pity and Beauty are short lived in life;
          But tinged with emotion persist in life
Headache is one of the commonest
    symptoms in medical practice.
 Aetiology:
 1) Raised intracranial pressure
       Due to tumours, abscesses, subdural
        haematoma, brain haemorrhage.
 2) Inflammation of the brain and
    meninges
       e.g. meningitis, cerebritis, others
It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking,
         that I am troubled withal   - Shakespeare
3) Migraine
     Congenital predisposition
     Triggered by hunger, cer tain foods, sleep -
      too much or too little, hormonal variations,
      stress.
     Pathology-vascular dilatation
     Females af fected more than males
     ? Proceeded by aura usually visual,
      paraesthesiae of hands, weakness
     Headache is unilateral or bilateral, af fects
      any area of the head, aching or throbbing
      of ten accompanied by nausea and
      vomiting
     Diagnosis - by histor y alone
     Treatment - prevention by there
            The sign wasn’t placed avoiding
      precipitating factors, appropriate
             By the Big Printer in the sky
4) Tension headache
     More common in adult females
     Positive family histor y (40%)
     Maybe associated with migraine
     Produced by persistent contraction of
      the muscles of the neck, head and face
     Caused by emotional tension,
      secondar y to other headaches, posture
      habit
     Treated by analgesics, muscle
      relaxants, physiotherapy


         NATURE, TIME AND PATIENCE
           are the 3 great physicians
5) Cluster headache
      90% are men
      Age 20 - 30
      Attacks occur in groups, no aura
      Caused by vascular dilatation of
       branches of external carotid
      Triggered by histamines, alcohol
      Treated by analgesics, anti-histamine,
       steroids

 Success is a prize to be won. Action is the road to it.
Chance is what may lurk in the shadows at the road side.
Pain from temporalis muscles
   Can   arise from grinding teeth at night




Science is below the mind; Spirituality is beyond the mind
Pain from upper neck muscles
     Can radiate over the head
      Treatment by physio-therapist or
      rheumatologist
Pain from frontalis muscles
     Usually due to bad posture at work
      or while driving
      Treatment: physio-therapy


      Memory, the daughter of attention, is the
      teeming mother of knowledge     - Martin
                     Tupper
Cer vical spondylosis
     Pain mediates upwards from the neck to
      the occiput or ver tex to the front of the
      head, down to the shoulders
     Due to cer vical discs prolapse
     Diagnosis - x-ray

      Treatment: Physio-therapy, referral to
      rheumatologist



           Experience can be defined as
       yesterday’s answer to today’s problems
Temporal ar teritis
    Due to acute inflammation of the ar ter y,
     the cause unknown, af fects men and
     women over the age of 60
    Pain over the temples and frontal region,
     intense, throbbing, tenderness over the
     scalp, swelling and redness of the
     overlying skin with general malaise, par tial
     or complete loss of vision.
    ESR Elevated

      Treatment: Cor tisone, analgesics

           “ByNature All Men/W en are alike but
                              om
               byEducation wid different”
                              ely
Psychologic headache
        Usually accompanied by
         depression, anxiety
        No organic lesion




It is a great misfortune not to possess sufficient wit to speak well
                nor sufficient judgment to keep silent
                                                   La Broyers character
Dedicated to my family for
making everything worthwhile
READ not to contradict or confute
Nor to Believe and Take for Granted
  but TO WEIGH AND CONSIDER




         My sincere thanks to P.Sampath

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Facial pain non odontogenic causes

  • 1. FACIAL PAIN-NON ODONTOGENIC CAUSES Dr. A.V. Srinivasan MD.,DM.,Ph.D ., D.Sc (HON).F.I.A.N.,F.A.AN. Emeritus professor of Tamilnadu Dr. M.G.R Medical University. Adjunct Professor –IIT, Chennai Former Head, Institute of Neurology- Madras medical college. Ragas Dental college 07-08-2011
  • 2.
  • 3. Chronic Pain Understanding, Impact and Awareness We learn by thinking and the quality of the learning outcome is determined by the quality of our thoughts R.B. Schmeck
  • 4. “Pain May be Inevitable, but Misery is Optional” Dee Malchow Pain constitutes nearly 40% of the total of patient visits to doctors. 1 “ByNature All Men/W en are alike but om byEducation widelydifferent” 1 Mäntyselkä et al. Pain as a reason to visit the doctor: a study in Finnish primary health care. Pain. 2001 Jan;89(2-3):175-80. - Chinese
  • 5. In 2001, Barry Furrow wrote “Pain is undertreated” in the American health-care system at all levels.2  The term "opiophobia" has been coined to describe this remarkable clinical aversion to the proper use of opioids to control pain.  The possible reasons for health-care providers' failures to properly manage pain are many;  Occasional lack of knowledge about appropriate treatment choices for pain management  A reflection of a Culture hostile to drug use  Threats of legal action.  Worry about tolerance and addiction and other adverse drug effects  Something as trivial as the lack of insurance cover, can lead to patients suffering unnecessary pain as a result. Every thing should be made as simple as possible; but not simpler
  • 6. Despite an essentially stoic and less demanding Indian patient; the obligation to manage pain comes to the fore not only to complete the perfection of a clinicians management.  But also, it is an independent entity with physical and psychological components that in adherence to best practices can neither be ignored nor treated such that adverse effects eclipse the malady.  This importance of pain management is further increased when benefits for the patient are realized,  Early mobilization which tends to prevent the more dangerous complication of a deep vein thrombosis;  Shortening hospital stay  Reducing costs Speak obligingly even if you cannot oblige
  • 7. In late 2000, US Congress passed into law a provision, which the president signed , that declared the 10 year period beginning Jan 1 st 2001, as the Decade of Pain Control and Research.  The American Pain Society has actively suppor ted the Decade of Pain Control Research, and it has been a focal point for the development of numerous programs to advance awareness and treatment of pain and funding for research. Neuronal damage, including that of neuronal cell membrane
  • 8. Pain is always a subjective experience • Everyone learns the meaning of “pain” through experiences usually related to injuries in early life • As an unpleasant sensation it becomes an emotional experience • Pain is a significant stress physically, emotionally The International Association for the Safety of Pain (IASP) defines pain an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage, or both. Develop the heart; art comes automatically
  • 9. Organic vs. psychogenic  Acute vs. chronic  Malignant or benign  Continuous or episodic Perceiving Pain • Algogenic substances – chemicals released at the site of the injury • Nociceptors – afferent neurons that carry pain messages • Referred pain – pain that is perceived as if it were coming from somewhere else in the body Symptoms vary depending on the location of occlusion and the extent of the spared collateral flow
  • 10. ACUTE CHRONIC Function To warn None (destructive) Etiology Usually Clear Complex/obscure Pt. Mood Anxiety/fear Depression/anger MD impact Comforting Frustrating/draining Role of Rx Control/cure Improve function/QOL Knowledge without action is useless; Action without knowledge is foolish
  • 11. Types of Pain Types of Pain (Psychogenic) (Psychogenic) Pain arising from Pain arising from Pain arising from Pain arising from pain receptors pain receptors Pain with NO apparent cause Pain with NO apparent cause Nervous system Nervous system [Nociceptive Pain] [Nociceptive Pain] (e.g. Low back pain or some (e.g. Low back pain or some [Neuropathic Pain] [Neuropathic Pain] pelvic pain in women) pelvic pain in women) Peripheral Peripheral Central Central Superficical / /Somatic Superficical Somatic Deep / /Visceral Deep Visceral (Brain and Spinal cord) (Peripheral nervous (Peripheral nervous (Brain and Spinal cord) system) system) Love is selfishness and selfishness is lovelessness
  • 12. Nociceptive descriptors Neuropathic descriptors Cramping, tender Shooting Gnawing, heavy Hot-burning Aching Sharp Splitting Stabbing Teachers are reservoirs from which, through the process of education, the students draw the water of life
  • 13. IASP (International Association for the Study of Pain) expert multi-axial classification of chronic pain  Axis I: Anatomical location  Axis II: Systems  Axis III: Temporal Characteristics (intermittent, constant, etc.)  Axis IV: Patient’s Statement of Duration/ Intensity / severity  Axis V: Etiology Example: Mild post-herpetic neuralgia of T5 or T 6; 6 months ’ duration = 303.22e Axis I: Thoracic region Axis II: Ner vous system (central, peripheral, or autonomic); physical disturbance/dysfunction Axis III: Continuous or nearly continuous, fluctuating severity Axis IV: Mild severity of 1 to 6 months Axis V: Trauma, operation, burns, infective, parasitic (one of these) Learn to adapt, adjust and accommodate Learn to give, not to take and learn to serve not to rule
  • 14. Chronic pain has a Hostility Depression psycho-social component that must be dealt with Psychological Factors before depression Pathological Process becomes a part of the Loneliness Physical Factors Social Factors clinical picture. Chronic Anxiety pain should be recognized as a multi-factorial disease state requiring intervention at many levels. TIME Science is below the mind; Spirituality is beyond the mind
  • 15. Chronic pain has high co-morbidity  Depression  Anxiety disorders  Sleep disorders  All diminish function and quality of life  Addressing these issues is essential to optimal pain management Give us the GRACE to accept with serenitythe things that cannot be changed the COURAGE to change the things that should be changed and the W ISDOM to know the difference
  • 16. Chronic pain is NOT a normal part of aging.  Emotions play a key role in painful experience  Pain sounds a warning, signaling damage to tissues, and has survival value so pain receptors do not adapt to prolonged stimulation and pain sensation may intensify as pain thresholds are lowered by continued stimulation.  The 19th Century viewed pain as a solely physiological entity with two theories dominating – the “specificity” & the “summation” theories. 8  Paradigm Shift:  Pain perception impulses are modified by ascending and by descending pain-suppressing systems activated by various environmental and psychological factors.  1965 Melzack & Wall: Gate Theory of Pain marked a turning point in understanding transmission and modulation of nociceptive signals, and recognition of pain as a psychophysiological phenomenon.  The concept of Neuroplasticity was recognized and accepted adding dynamism to neuronal & brain structure with neuroimaging of the central nervous system in three domains; anatomical, functional, and chemical imaging helping measure changes in chronic pain.  Taken together these three domains have changed our thinking on pain; now considered an altered brain state in which there may be altered functional connections or systems and components of degenerative aspects of the CNS. 9 Hate screeches, fear squeals; conceits trumpets but love since lullabies
  • 17. A bad teacher complains; A good teacher explains; The best teacher inspires;
  • 18. Trauma/ injury initiates immediate nerve impulses to brain  Injury to cells result in chemical release  H+  K+  Substance P  Bradykinin  5HT  Phospholipids ⇒Prostaglandins  Blood vessels leak resulting in inflammation  Stimulate C-fibres (slow response) Reputation is made in a moment; character is built in a life time
  • 19. Ascending Tracts Descending Tracts Cortex Thalamus Midbrain Pons Medulla (Brookoff, 2000) Spinal Cord
  • 20.
  • 21. Αδ ( A delta)  Myelinated  Fast conductors  Gentle pressure and pain  Αβ (A beta)  Thinner – but still myelinated  Fast conductors  Heavy pressure &temp  C - very thin  Slow conductors  PAIN, Pressure, temp & chemicals Character gets you out of bed commitment moves you to action faith, hope and Discipline follow through to completion
  • 22. In chronic pain, the nervous system remodels continuously in response to repeated pain signals  ner ves become hypersensitive to pain  ner ves become resistant to anti-nociceptive system  If untreated, pain signals will continue even after injury resolves  Chronic pain signals become embedded in the central nervous system It is the providence of the knowledge to speak and it is the privilege of the wisdom to listen - Hodly’s
  • 23. Pain-Sensing System in the Malfunction in Chronic Pain Acute pain: Pain Pain-sensing signals are initiated in response to a Sensing stimulus • They elicit a pain- In chronic pain, relieving response pain signals are generated without physiologic Chronic pain: significance Pain signals are generated for no reason and may be intensified • Pain-relieving mechanisms may be defective or deactivated ) Opinion is ultimately determined by the feelings and not by the intellect
  • 24. Reticulospinal fibers from raphe nuclei project to dorsal horn of spinal cord and release serotonin which stimulates interneurons to release enkephalin  Enkephalin inhibits transmission of pain and temperature signals in second order neurons  Reticulospinal fibers from locus coruleus also project to dorsal horn of spinal cord and release norepinephrine which inhibits pain and temperature signals by an unknown mechanism  Mental illnesses such as depression decrease serotonin and norepinephrine and lower pain thresholds while antidepressant drugs and therapies (e.g., exercise) which increase serotonin and norepinephrine levels raise pain thresholds A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely re arranging their prejudices W. James
  • 25. Inferred from characteristics, etiology or pathophysiology  Types  Nociceptive  Neuropathic  Idiopathic  Therapeutic implications Opinion is ultimately determined by the feelings and not by the intellect
  • 26. Presumably results from ongoing activation of primary afferent neurons responding to noxious stimuli  Pain consistent with degree of tissue injury  Described as aching, squeezing, stabbing, throbbing  Subtypes:  Somatic: related to activation of somatic af ferent neurons  Visceral: related to activation of visceral af ferent neurons T T he ruth is fear and immorality are two of the greatest inhibitors of Performance to progress
  • 27. Initiated by a primary lesion in the nervous system; believed to be sustained by aberrant somatosensory processing in the peripheral or central nervous system  Independent of obvious ongoing nociceptive activation  Burning, shooting, electrical quality; may be aching, throbbing, sharp  Subtypes:  Presumed “central generator”  deaf ferentation pain (central pain, phantom pain)  Sympathetically -maintained pain  Presumed “peripheral generator”  Polyneuropathies and mononeuropathies A true com itm is a heart felt prom to y m ent ise ourself fromwhich y will not back down ou - D. Mcnally
  • 28. Idiopathic Pain  Usually exists in the absence of an identifiable physical or psychologic pathology that could account for pain  Uncommon in patients with progressive illness Psychogenic Pain  Presents positive evidence of a predominant psychologic contribution and may be labeled with a specific psychiatric diagnosis Serious, sincere, systematic studies, surely secure supreme success
  • 29. Greater understanding of the pathophysiology underlying chronic pain syndromes  Scientific breakthroughs in molecular biology; insight into pain at the molecular level  Advances in drug therapy (drug delivery technologies)  Multimodal therapy  Multidisciplinary teams, shared decision-making that includes patients  Patients’ rights movement Why is thought, being the secretion of the brain, more wonderful than gravity, a property of matter?
  • 30. Progress in Chronic Pain Management: Therapeutic Modalities for Chronic Pain Management Assessment God is a comedian performing before an audience that is afraid to laugh
  • 31. “Describing pain only in terms of its intensity is like describing music only in terms of its loudness” “Men of Genius Adm ired: Men of W ealth envied wom of power feared but only en wom of character are trusted” en A- Friedman
  • 32. Characterize the pain  Characterize the disease, relationship between pain and disease and potentially treatable etiologies  Clarify syndromes and infer pathophysiology  Determine need for urgent therapy  Identify other needs  Develop a therapeutic strategy The word shall perish not for lack of wonders but lack of wonder
  • 33. Components  History: temporal features, intensity, topography, quality, exacerbating/alleviating factors  Physical Exam: determine existence of underlying pathology  Lab and Radiographic Tests: appropriate to pain syndrome Assessment Tools  Pain Intensity Scales: VAS, NAS, “faces” scale  Multidimensional Pain Measures: Brief Pain Inventory, McGill Pain Questionnaire In any field, find the strangest thing and explore it
  • 34. • Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) No pain ----------------------------------- Worst pain • Numerical Rating Scale 0 ------------------------------------- 10 Worst pain No pain imaginable • Categorical Scale None (0) Mild (1 – 4) Moderate (5 – 6) Severe (7 – 10) • Pain Faces Scale 0 2 4 6 8 10 No Hurts just a Hurts a little Hurts even Hurts a whole Hurts as much hurt little bit bit more more lot as you can imagine • Brief Pain Inventory Shade areas of worst pain. Put an X on area that hurts most There are sixty trillion cells in the human body
  • 35. Progress in Chronic Pain Management Therapeutic Modalities for Chronic Pain Management Treatment
  • 36. Pharmacotherapy (Analgesics)  Non-opioids  Adjuvant Analgesics  Antidepressants  Anticonvulsants  Opioids  Rehabilitative Approaches  Psychologic Interventions  Anesthesiological Approaches  Neurostimulatory Techniques  Surgery  Complementary/Alternative Approaches  Lifestyle Changes Baby hears 30,000 cycles / sec, teenage boy hears 20,000 and old hears 4,000 cycles / sec
  • 37. Best evidence: TCAs  Inhibit both NA and 5-HT reuptake  TCAs are superior to SSRIs in pain management  TCAs are superior to the anticonvulsant  There is no consensus regarding which of the many TCA derivatives is most effective.  The choice of TCA is therefore dictated largely by adverse effects There are sixty trillion cells in the human body
  • 38. “Motivation is the Spark that lights the Fire of Knowledge and fuels the engine of Accomplishment”
  • 39. Major reason for seeking medical care.  90% is vasculr headache.  10% is mixture of inflammation,traction or dilatation of pain sensitive structure. A true commitment is a heart felt promise to yourself from which you will not back down - D. Mcnally
  • 40. Pain  Referred pain  Pattern of referred pain Success in life is a matter not so much of talent and opportunity as of concentration and perseverance - C.W. Wendte
  • 41. History  Hx of present illness  Past medical hx  Family hx  Social hx  Physical examination We possess by nature the factors out of which personality can be made, and to organize them into effective personal life is every man’s primary responsibility - Harry Emerson Fosdick
  • 42. Clinical features suggesting serious cause  Crescendo  Early morning  Vomiting  Fever  Seizures & other neurological symptomes  Worst headache in my life  Known malignancy  Tenderness
  • 43. Typical Neuralgias 1) Trigeminal neuralgia • Characterized by recurring paroxysmal severe pain, brief duration (seconds) in the territor y of the trigeminal ner ve, spontaneously or initiated by chewing, talking, touching the af fected side of the face. • Unknown aetiology, an ar terial loop pushing on the sensor y root in the posterior fossa. • Females af fected more than males • Analgesics, surger y, destruction of the sensor y neuron, division of ner ve root. “ He who cannot forgive others destroy the bridge over which he s him m pass” self ust - Annoy
  • 44. Typical Neuralgias 2) Glossophar yngeal neuralgia • Unknown cause • Equal both sexes • Severe, sudden episodes of pain in the tonsil region one side only, ipsilateral ear. • Pain - severe for 1-2 hours, recur daily • Treated like trigeminalthere is a In all of us, even in good men, wild - beast nature which peers out in sleep
  • 45. Typical Neuralgias 3) Sluder’s neuralgia and Vidian neuralgia • Intractable pain in the nose, eye, cheek and lower jaw. • Could be due to lesion of the sphenopalatine ganglion, or vidian ner ve. • Analgesics, vidian neurectomy The art of medicine is caring for the heart of the patient
  • 46. Posttraumatic neuralgia  Neuroma  Parietal & occipital  90% recover y Experience can be defined as yesterday’s answer to today’s problems
  • 47. Atypical facial pain  Pain felt over the cheek, nose, upper lip or lower jaw  Usually bilaterally symmetrical  Aching, shooting, burning, accompanied by reddening of the skin and lacrimation or watering of the nose  Lasts for hours, days or weeks  Psychological consultation, analgesics The sign wasn’t placed there By the Big Printer in the sky
  • 48. Intracranial lesions 1) Central lesions • Tumours of the brain stem, M.S., thrombotic lesions, metastasis, occult naso-phar yngeal ca. • No precipitant, sensor y loss. 2) Post herpetic neuralgia • Herpes zoster may af fect trigeminal ner ve ganglion • Vesicular rash covers one division commonly the 1 st with severe pain. It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking, that I am troubled withal - Shakespeare
  • 49. Extracranial lesions 1) Sinus disease • Infective and neoplastic lesions of the paranasal sinus. • Facial pain & dental pain, loss teeth. • Clinical suspicion. • Treatment 2) Dental neuralgia • Dental carries • Dental extraction 3) Temporomandibular joint pain Memory, Pity and Beauty are short lived in life; But tinged with emotion persist in life
  • 50. Headache is one of the commonest symptoms in medical practice. Aetiology: 1) Raised intracranial pressure  Due to tumours, abscesses, subdural haematoma, brain haemorrhage. 2) Inflammation of the brain and meninges  e.g. meningitis, cerebritis, others It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking, that I am troubled withal - Shakespeare
  • 51. 3) Migraine  Congenital predisposition  Triggered by hunger, cer tain foods, sleep - too much or too little, hormonal variations, stress.  Pathology-vascular dilatation  Females af fected more than males  ? Proceeded by aura usually visual, paraesthesiae of hands, weakness  Headache is unilateral or bilateral, af fects any area of the head, aching or throbbing of ten accompanied by nausea and vomiting  Diagnosis - by histor y alone  Treatment - prevention by there The sign wasn’t placed avoiding precipitating factors, appropriate By the Big Printer in the sky
  • 52. 4) Tension headache  More common in adult females  Positive family histor y (40%)  Maybe associated with migraine  Produced by persistent contraction of the muscles of the neck, head and face  Caused by emotional tension, secondar y to other headaches, posture habit  Treated by analgesics, muscle relaxants, physiotherapy NATURE, TIME AND PATIENCE are the 3 great physicians
  • 53. 5) Cluster headache  90% are men  Age 20 - 30  Attacks occur in groups, no aura  Caused by vascular dilatation of branches of external carotid  Triggered by histamines, alcohol  Treated by analgesics, anti-histamine, steroids Success is a prize to be won. Action is the road to it. Chance is what may lurk in the shadows at the road side.
  • 54. Pain from temporalis muscles Can arise from grinding teeth at night Science is below the mind; Spirituality is beyond the mind
  • 55. Pain from upper neck muscles  Can radiate over the head Treatment by physio-therapist or rheumatologist Pain from frontalis muscles  Usually due to bad posture at work or while driving Treatment: physio-therapy Memory, the daughter of attention, is the teeming mother of knowledge - Martin Tupper
  • 56. Cer vical spondylosis  Pain mediates upwards from the neck to the occiput or ver tex to the front of the head, down to the shoulders  Due to cer vical discs prolapse  Diagnosis - x-ray Treatment: Physio-therapy, referral to rheumatologist Experience can be defined as yesterday’s answer to today’s problems
  • 57. Temporal ar teritis  Due to acute inflammation of the ar ter y, the cause unknown, af fects men and women over the age of 60  Pain over the temples and frontal region, intense, throbbing, tenderness over the scalp, swelling and redness of the overlying skin with general malaise, par tial or complete loss of vision.  ESR Elevated Treatment: Cor tisone, analgesics “ByNature All Men/W en are alike but om byEducation wid different” ely
  • 58. Psychologic headache  Usually accompanied by depression, anxiety  No organic lesion It is a great misfortune not to possess sufficient wit to speak well nor sufficient judgment to keep silent La Broyers character
  • 59. Dedicated to my family for making everything worthwhile
  • 60.
  • 61. READ not to contradict or confute Nor to Believe and Take for Granted but TO WEIGH AND CONSIDER My sincere thanks to P.Sampath

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. 08/13/12 12:48 PM
  2. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Numerous surveys from the United States and Europe during the last decade have shown that 30% to 50% of adult patients in active therapy for a solid tumor experienced chronic pain. With advanced disease, the prevalence of pain increased to 90%. A recent survey by the IASP concluded that the inferred mechanism of pain is neuropathic in 40% of cases. In a very large survey of institutionalized elderly patients with cancer, the prevalence of pain was 27.4%, and pain was associated independently with age, gender, race, marital status, functionality, and cognitive status. Cancer pain is often associated with psychological distress and functional impairment. Unrelieved pain may significantly impaired quality of life . In the AIDS population, the prevalence rates range from 25% to 80%. This broad range reflects differences in populations studied and pain assessment methodologies. Bernabei R, Gambassi G, Lapane K, et al: Management of pain in elderly patients with cancer. JAMA. 1998;279:1877-1882. Caraceni A, Portenoy RK, a working group of the IASP Task Force on Cancer Pain. An international survey of cancer pain characteristics and syndromes. Pain . 1999;82:263-274. Cleeland CS, Gonin R, Harfield AK, et al: Pain and its treatment in outpatients with metastatic cancer. N Engl J Med. 1994;330:592-596. Heim HM, Oei TP: Comparison of prostate cancer patients with and without pain. Pain. 1993; 53:159-162. Portenoy, RK: Cancer pain. Pathophysiology and syndromes. Lancet. 1992; 339:1026-1031. Portenoy RK, Kornblith AB, Wong G, et al: Pain in ovarian cancer. Prevalence, characteristics, and associated symptoms. Cancer . 1994;74:907-915. Serlin RC, Mendoza TR, Nakamura Y, et al: When is cancer pain mild, moderate or severe? Grading pain severity by its interference with function. Pain. 1995;61L277-284.
  3. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Chronic pain may be seen as presenting a fundamental challenge to medicine. The experience of chronic pain is very common and chronic pain is part of the experience of many illnesses. However, the links between the experience of chronic pain and visible or detectable pathology or diagnosable illness are often non-existent or unclear. In philosophical terms, chronic pain challenges the distinction between mind and body which much medical knowledge assumes. It also challenges the notion of cure as a goal of medical practice. And we face such patients routinely in our practice. Infact 40% of our total patients constitute pain sufferers. And there is always an urge when talking of pain, to magnify its image, using eye-catching overstatements and graphology and create a larger than life impression. Health care professionals face pain so often; they develop some form of defense mechanism to deal with it. Some learn to ignore it, some play it down and some others dismiss it with a wry smile. But the age old adage remains and shall remain true till science evolves several steps and generations in progress; diagnose as many, treat some, cure a few, but empathize with all.
  4. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Pain being such an important presenting complaint in practice, the US government declared the last decade as Decade of Pain Control and Research. This also helped in development of numerous programs to advance awareness and treatment of pain and funding for research.
  5. 08/13/12 12:48 PM
  6. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Neuropathic pain caused by damage to or a dysfunction of the nervous system e.g. post herpetic neuralgia, diabetic neuropathy, pain following trauma or compression is generally un-diagnosed and poorly managed Nociceptive pain is caused by noxious stimuli of pain receptors with info transferred centrally e.g inflammation or headache, it is managed by analgesics, NSAIDs or opioids
  7. 08/13/12 12:48 PM This system is the most comprehensive approach to classification of chronic pain syndromes; it is intended to standardize descriptions of pain syndromes and provide a point of reference. The system establishes a 5-digit code that assigns a unique number to each chronic pain diagnosis. The digital code (1 through 9 within each “axis”) is first, followed by letters used as suffixes, if necessary. Axis I: concerned with regions; if patient has pain in more than one region, use two codes Axis II: concerned with systems, such as nervous system, respiratory, musculoskeletal, etc.; some details open to debate, but practicality should prevail Axis III: deals with characteristics of pain Axis IV : filled in according to the patient’s report of severity or chronicity of the illness Axis V: concerns mechanisms involved in pain production and is most open to debate. Letters (a, b, c, d, etc.): Since some syndromes have same final five-digit code, a letter may be added to the sixth place to distinguish them. It could indicate acute vs chronic conditions, but usually merely indicates the first of several conditions to be described with the same five digits. An example: Mild postherpetic neuralgia of T5 or T 6, 6 months’ duration = 303.22e Axis I: Thoracic region Axis II: Nervous system (central, peripheral, or autonomic); physical disturbance/dysfunction Axis III: Continuous or nearly continuous, fluctuating severity Axis IV: Mild severity of 1 to 6 months Axis V: Trauma, operation, burns, infective, parasitic (one of these) Loeser JDF, Butler, SH, Chapman CR et al. Bonica’s Management of Pain. 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams Wilkins; 2001:19-21. Merskey H, Bogduk N, eds. Classification of Chronic Pain: Descriptions of Chronic Pain Syndromes and Definitions of Chronic Pain Syndromes and Definitions of Pain Terms. 2nd ed. Seattle, WA: IASP Press; 1994: 3-4.
  8. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Complicated by central processing that allows pain to be experienced as a cognitive function.. How we interpret pain is important and can affect patients life- as shown in next slide where the interplay of afferent and efferent fibres is demonstrated.
  9. 08/13/12 12:48 PM The physiology of normal pain transmission involves some basic concepts that are necessary in order to understand the pathophysiology of abnormal or nonphysiologic pain. These include the concept of transduction of the first-order afferent neuron nociceptors. The nociceptor neurons have specific receptors that respond to specific stimuli if a specific degree of amplitude of the stimulus is applied to the receptor in the periphery. If sufficient stimulation of the receptor occurs, then there is a depolarization of the nociceptor neuron. The nociceptive axon carries this impulse from the periphery into the dorsal horn of the spinal cord to make connections directly, and indirectly, through spinal interneurons, with second-order afferent neurons in the spinal cord. The second-order neurons can transmit these impulses from the spinal cord to the brain. Second-order neurons ascend mostly via the spinothalamic tract up the spinal cord and terminate in higher neural structures, including the thalamus of the brain. Third-order neurons originate from the thalamus and transmit their signals to the cerebral cortex. Evidence exists that numerous supraspinal control areas—including the reticular formation, midbrain, thalamus, hypothalamus, the limbic system of the amygdala and the cingulate cortex, basal ganglia, and cerebral cortex—modulate pain. Neurons originating from these cerebral areas synapse with the neuronal cells of the descending spinal pathways, which terminate in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Brookoff D. Chronic Pain: A New Disease? Hosp Pract (Off Ed) 2000;35:45-52, 59.
  10. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Expand on neural plasticity here – changes in chronic pain vs acute pain is important
  11. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Medication acts on different areas of this pathway Ask the audience what medication is effective at each Here we can add in the five points to pain NSAIDs at periphery mostly Paracetamol – or acetaminophen centrally Opioids on ascending pathways interfere with sP A beta fibres affecting gating of pain in S G – T cells Descending pathways also affect T cells in SG
  12. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Chronic pain is not just a prolonged version of acute pain. It often occurs in the absence of ongoing illness or after healing is completed, and often begins with an injury that causes inflammation and CNS changes. The injured area heals, scar tissue is formed, and the inflammation recedes. But for an unknown reason, the nervous system undergoes multiple changes that perpetuate the pain experience, continuing to send pain signals to somatic muscles. The nervous system reacts to the memory of the original injury and sends signals like those sent in response to that original injury. These signals become a recurring and disabling message that remind the patient of the original injury. As pain signals are repeatedly generated, neural pathways undergo physiochemical changes that make them hypersensitive to the pain signals and resistant to antinociceptive input. The pain signals can become embedded in the spinal cord, like a painful memory. This is why the c urrent perception of pain can be influenced by prior experience of chronic pain. Marcus D. Treatment of nonmalignant chronic pain. Am Fam Physician. 2000;61:1331-1338; 1345-1346.
  13. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Pain signals in the form of electrical impulses are carried by peripheral nerves called nociceptors (C-fibers) that synapse with neurons in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The pain signal is then transmitted via the spinothalamic tract to the cerebral cortex, where it is perceived, localized, and interpreted. The body’s pain-relieving, or antinociceptive, system balances out the pain-sensing system. When pain signals transmitted by peripheral nerves, or nociceptors , arrive in the brain, they activate neurons in the periaqueductal gray matter of the brain and the nucleus raphe magnus of the brainstem, which release endorphins and enkephalins. In addition to pain signals, other stimuli can trigger activation of the anti-nociceptive system, such as exercise, meditation, and comforting or reassurance. This explains the utility of many of the behavioral components of pain management programs. Image adapted with permission: Brookoff D. Chronic Pain: A New Disease? Hosp Pract (Off Ed) 2000;35(7): 45-52, 59. ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Illustration by Seward Hung. Besson, JM. The neurobiology of pain. Lancet. 1999;353:1610-1615 .
  14. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Effective management of pain relies on a comprehensive assessment that defines the characteristics, etiology, and the underlying pathophysiology of the pain. Etiology. Defining the underlying organic activity that may be contributing to the pain may clarify the nature of the disease, indicate a prognosis, or suggest the use of specific therapies. Pathophysiology. Animal and clinical research suggest that the clinical presentation and the response to therapy of a particular pain syndrome may be determined by factors linked to the underlying mechanism of the pain. Although the classification that can be derived from such observations may be oversimplistic, it has clinical utility and so has become widely accepted. Using this scheme, the predominating pathophysiology of pain can be broadly defined as nociceptive, neuropathic, and idiopathic. Characteristics. The patient should be asked to describe the characteristics of the pain in terms of temporal aspects, intensity, topography, and exacerbating/relieving factors. Portenoy RK, Kanner RM, eds. Pain Management: Theory and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: FA Davis Company; 1996:11.
  15. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Nociceptive pain is presumably related to ongoing activation of primary afferent neurons responsive to noxious stimuli. The activation of the nociceptors is related to tissue damage, although the relationship between pain and tissue damage is neither uniform nor constant. Nociceptive pain includes somatic pain and visceral pain. Somatic pain refers to ongoing activation of somatic afferent neurons. Bone pain is a typical example of this type of pain. Visceral pain is related to the activation of the primary afferent neurons that innervate viscera. Liver capsular pain is an example of visceral pain. Loeser JDF, Butler SH, Chapman CR et al. Bonica’s Management of Pain. 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams Wilkins; 2001:581. Portenoy RK, Kanner RM, eds. Pain Management: Theory and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: FA Davis Company; 1996:11. Loeser JDF, Butler, SH, Chapman CR et al. Bonica’s Management of Pain, 3 rd Ed., Baltimore, Lippincott Williams Wilkins , 2001. Portenoy RK, Kanner RM, eds. Pain Management: Theory and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: FA Davis Company; 1996:219-247.
  16. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Neuropathic pain is believed to be sustained by aberrant somatosensory processing in the peripheral or central nervous system. It includes numerous clinical entities, which vary in their presentation pathophysiology and treatment. The classification is based on inferred location of the pain “generator” (peripheral or central) and types of mechanisms involved. Three major categories have been recognized: deafferentation pain, sympathetically-maintained pain and peripheral neuropathic pain. Deafferentation pains are presumably related to pathophysiologic processes in the CNS. Subtypes include pain caused by injury to the brain or spinal cord, phantom pain, postherpetic neuralgia and pain caused by root avulsion. Sympathetically-maintained pain is defined as a pain presumed to be sustained by efferent activity in the sympathetic nervous system. A sympathetic nerve block is needed to establish the diagnosis of sympathetically-maintained pain. This type of pain appears to occur most frequently in the setting of a complex regional pain syndrome. The term complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), also known as reflex sympathetic dystrophy or causalgia , refers to a regional pain syndrome in which pain is associated with focal autonomic dysfunction (vasomotor instability, swelling, sweating) and/or trophic changes (thinning of the skin, changes in hair growth, bone and subcutaneous tissue losses). Peripheral neuropathic pain is usually caused by a focal peripheral nerve injury or by a diffuse injury (polyneuropathy). Portenoy RK, Kanner RM, eds. Pain Management: Theory and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: FA Davis Company; 1996:83, 87, 93.
  17. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Idiopathic pain persists in the absence of an identifiable organic substrate and is believed to be excessive for the organic processes that exist. This type of pain is uncommon in mentally ill patients. A subgroup of patients with idiopathic pain presents positive evidence of a predominant psychologic contribution to the pain. These pains are described as psychogenic or are labeled with a specific psychiatric diagnosis. Loeser JDF, Butler SH, Chapman CR et al. Bonica’s Management of Pain. 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams Wilkins; 2001:19-21. Merskey H, Bogduk N, eds. Classification of Chronic Pain: Descriptions of Chronic Pain Syndromes and Definitions of Chronic Pain Syndromes and Definitions of Pain Terms . 2nd ed. Seattle, WA: IASP Press; 1994. Portenoy RK, Kanner RM, eds. Pain Management: Theory and Practice. Philadelphia, PA: FA Davis Company; 1996:11.
  18. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Since the early 1960’s, developments have taken place that can rectify some of the deficiencies in the understanding and treatment of pain that existed even in the early 20 th century. Research has given us a greater understanding of the pathophysiology underlying many chronic pain syndromes. This understanding has led to advances in drug therapies, the use of multimodal therapies, and the belief that in some cases the optimal treatment of chronic pain is best managed by a multidisciplinary team. A pioneer and giant in the field of pain therapy, John Bonica, established the first multidisciplinary pain clinic, the Multidisciplinary Pain Center, at the University of Washington in 1960. Patient’s rights movements have been supported by documents such as the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Association’s (JCAHO) Pain Standards for 2001 , which states that all patients have the right to the appropriate assessment and management of pain. Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. Patient Rights and Organization Ethics. Referenced from the Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals, Update 3, 1999. http://www.jcaho.org/standards_frm.html Loeser JDF, Butler SH, Chapman CR et al. Bonica’s Management of Pain. 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams Wilkins; 2001:3-15.
  19. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Numerous surveys from the United States and Europe during the last decade have shown that 30% to 50% of adult patients in active therapy for a solid tumor experienced chronic pain. With advanced disease, the prevalence of pain increased to 90%. A recent survey by the IASP concluded that the inferred mechanism of pain is neuropathic in 40% of cases. In a very large survey of institutionalized elderly patients with cancer, the prevalence of pain was 27.4%, and pain was associated independently with age, gender, race, marital status, functionality, and cognitive status. Cancer pain is often associated with psychological distress and functional impairment. Unrelieved pain may significantly impaired quality of life . In the AIDS population, the prevalence rates range from 25% to 80%. This broad range reflects differences in populations studied and pain assessment methodologies. Bernabei R, Gambassi G, Lapane K, et al: Management of pain in elderly patients with cancer. JAMA. 1998;279:1877-1882. Caraceni A, Portenoy RK, a working group of the IASP Task Force on Cancer Pain. An international survey of cancer pain characteristics and syndromes. Pain . 1999;82:263-274. Cleeland CS, Gonin R, Harfield AK, et al: Pain and its treatment in outpatients with metastatic cancer. N Engl J Med. 1994;330:592-596. Heim HM, Oei TP: Comparison of prostate cancer patients with and without pain. Pain. 1993; 53:159-162. Portenoy, RK: Cancer pain. Pathophysiology and syndromes. Lancet. 1992; 339:1026-1031. Portenoy RK, Kornblith AB, Wong G, et al: Pain in ovarian cancer. Prevalence, characteristics, and associated symptoms. Cancer . 1994;74:907-915. Serlin RC, Mendoza TR, Nakamura Y, et al: When is cancer pain mild, moderate or severe? Grading pain severity by its interference with function. Pain. 1995;61L277-284.
  20. 08/13/12 12:48 PM The goal of pain assessment is the development of a pain-oriented problem list, which, in addition to characterizing pain, prioritizes other physical and psychosocial problems that may influence therapy or be amenable to primary treatment. Portenoy RK, Payne R: Acute and chronic pain. In: Lowinson JH, Ruiz P, Millman RB, eds. Comprehensive Textbook of Substance Abuse. 3rd ed. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins; 1997:563-589.
  21. 08/13/12 12:48 PM In order to make a comprehensive evaluation, the physician must take a detailed history from the patient. Temporal Features. Temporal features include onset, duration, frequency and constancy of the pain. Pain can be acute or chronic. Chronic pain may be punctuated by breakthrough pains (transitory acute pain). Intensity. Pain intensity should be measured validly and repeatedly using a simple scale. (See next slide) Topography. Pain can be described as focal, multifocal, generalized, referred. Focal pain s are usually well circumscribed, at the site of the lesion. Referred pains are experienced at a site remote from the presumed lesion. Pains can be referred from an injury in any deep tissues, including viscera, muscle, bone and peripheral or central nervous system. Quality. Descriptors of pain quality can be clues to underlying mechanisms. Somatic pains are often described as aching, throbbing or sometimes stabbing. The quality of visceral pains will vary according to the organ. In injury to hollow viscus, the pain is often described as cramping or gnawing. Neuropathic pains are usually described as dysesthesic (lancinating, burning, electric-shock-like, tingling). Exacerbating/Relieving Factors. Factors that aggravate or relieve pain may be useful for diagnostic purposes and treatment: they can be categorized as volitional or spontaneous. Pain induced by light touch on normal skin (allodynia) suggests a neuropathic component. Portenoy RK, Payne R: Acute and chronic pain. In: Lowinson JH, Ruiz P, Millman RB, eds. Comprehensive Textbook of Substance Abuse, 3rd ed. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins; 1997:566-567.
  22. 08/13/12 12:48 PM A “faces” scale may be useful for patients who are unable to use NRS or VAS scales, such as children, the elderly, or patients with dementia. The Brief Pain Inventory is a straightforward and easily administered tool that provides the practitioner with information about pain history, intensity, location, quality, and interference. It includes a number of questions, each of which is answered by the patient on a scale of 1 to 10. Included are questions about pain characteristics as well as functionality. It also includes the simple body outlines above, on which the patient is asked to mark the areas of greatest pain. Cleeland, CS. Pain Research Group University of Texas M.D.Anderson Cancer Center. BPI Copyright 1991. Wong DL, Hockenberry-Eaton M, Wilson D, Winkelstein ML, Schwartz P. Wong’s Essentials of Pediatric Nursing. 6 th ed. St Louis, Missouri: Mosby, Inc.; 2001:1301. Reprinted by permission .
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  24. 08/13/12 12:48 PM Opioid Analgesics . Opioids are the mainstay drugs for moderate-to-severe pain associated with medical illness. Opioid analgesics can be classified as pure mu-agonists or agonist-antagonists based on their receptor interactions. The agonist-antagonist class can be subdivided into a mixed agonist-antagonist subclass and a partial agonist subclass. Because of their ceiling effect for analgesia and potential for reversing analgesia from pure agonists in physically-dependent patients, the agonist-antagonist drugs are not preferred for treating chronic pain. Nonopioid Analgesics. N onopioid analgesics include acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS). They are usually used for mild-to-moderate pain. They have an additive effect when combined with opioids. There is substantial variability in the response of individual patients to different drugs. The selective COX-2 inhibitors (celecoxib, rofecoxib, valdecoxib, oncloxicam) have a more favorable GI safety profile than the nonselective COX-1 and COX-2 inhibitors. The nonselective drugs vary in toxicity. Drug selection should be influenced by drug-selective toxicities, prior experience, cost, and convenience. Adjuvant Analgesics. Adjuvant analgesics are drugs that have other primary indications but may be analgesic in specific circumstances. In the medically ill, adjuvant analgesics are more commonly used in the treatment of neuropathic pain. Drug selection should be guided by the risks associated with the therapy and the possibility of secondary benefits for symptoms other than pain. Sequential trials and dose titration are usually necessary. The appropriate use of adjuvant analgesics requires the clinician to know the approved indications, side effects, time-action relationship, pharmacokinetics, and specific guidelines for use in pain treatment. Cashman JN. The mechanisms of action of NSAIDS in analgesia. Drugs. 1996;52(suppl 5):S13-S23 . Galer BS. Painful poplyneuropathy. Neurologic Clinics. 1998;16(4):791-811. Hanks GW, Portenoy RK, MacDonald N, et al. Difficult pain problems. In: Doyle D, Hanks GW, MacDonald N, eds. Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine . Oxford: Oxford University Press; 1998:454. Langman MJ, Jensen DM, Watson DJ, et al. Adverse upper gastrointestinal effects of rofecoxib compared with NSAIDs. JAMA. 1999;282:1929-1933. Simon LS, Weaver AL, Graham DY, et al. Anti-inflammatory and upper gastrointestinal effects of celocoxib in rheumatoid arthritis: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 1999;282:1921-1928.   Stein C. The control of pain in peripheral tissues by opioids. N Engl J Med. 1995;332:1685-1690.