Pain Management Guidelines, Types, Treatment, Prognosis (original) (raw)

What is pain?

Elbow pain

The goal of pain management is to maximize quality of life, even though some level of pain may still exist.

Pain is a symptom usually caused by an injury or illness that causes tissue inflammation. Pain is an individual experience, and its definition is vague, allowing each patient to determine the quality and quantity as it affects them in the moment.

The most recent accepted definition of pain is “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage.” Pain is always a personal experience influenced to varying degrees by biological, psychological, and social factors. - International Association for the Study of Pain

The Association added six keynotes to help understand the definition:

What is pain management?

Whether a patient experiences pain from an acute injury or has a long-standing painful condition, one of the responsibilities of the health care provider is to ease suffering and improve the quality of life.

An acute injury, whether a broken bone or appendicitis, usually has attention to pain control as part of the treatment plan of the underlying condition. The pain management may be short term analgesia (an=absence + gesia=pain), like pain medications, while the injury or condition resolves.

For those with long term or chronic pain, a multidisciplinary approach to pain management may be required. The skills of a team of health care providers, physical therapists, chiropractors, pharmacists, and psychologists may be needed to help the patient.

The goal of pain management is to maximize quality of life, even though some level of pain may still exist. This goal may be achieved by either lessening the pain, increasing the patient’s understanding of it, or both. Each treatment option by itself or in combination, has potential benefits, complications, and risks. A pain management plan will try to minimize risks while maximizing benefits.

Because every patient has different personal circumstances, perceptions of pain, and expectations, there is no one formula for pain treatment. Each treatment plan is individualized and needs to be modified as the patient’s physical condition changes, their disease state changes, and their life circumstances change.

Please note this article addresses general pain management guidelines that may not necessarily apply to children or those at the end of life.

SLIDESHOW Pain Management: Surprising Causes of Pain See Slideshow

What are the types of pain?

There are other types of pain that do not necessarily fit neatly into the above two categories. Chronic low back pain and recurrent migraine headaches are examples of pains that may be both nociceptive and neuropathic.

In addition, there are other types of pain that are neither of the above. Examples include the following:

Time definition of pain

The International Association for the Study of Pain has no time definition for acute or chronic pain. Some have defined acute pain as pain of recent onset and probable limited duration, with an identifiable temporal and causal relationship to an injury or disease. Chronic pain can be defined as pain that persists past the normal time of (tissue) healing, lasting three to six months or longer. But this definition does not work well for neuropathic pain or chronic inflammatory conditions like rheumatoid arthritis.

The use of time to classify pain does not help address or direct diagnosis or treatment.

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How is pain treated?

When patients present with pain, regardless of the cause, the first expectation may be that they will be given medication for relief. That may be a viable option, but medication is only one of the options available to a health care provider and a pain management team to control pain in the short and long term.

Pain management medication

There are numerous medication options for treating pain and each has its role dependent on the injury, illness, and underlying medical conditions.

Physical therapy pain management

The use of exercise, stretching, ultrasound, and electrical stimulation may be helpful in patients who have musculoskeletal pain from a muscle or ligament origin. This includes back and neck pain, two of the most common causes of chronic pain.

Providers whose skills fall into this category include physicians specializing in physical medicine and rehabilitation, physical therapists, chiropractors, massage therapists, and acupuncturists.

Interventional pain management procedures

In an acute injury, an emergency physician might use a nerve block, a local anesthetic injected near a nerve to numb it and help alleviate the pain of a dislocated shoulder or broken hip. This might lessen the need for narcotic pain medication.

For those with longer-term pain, interventional radiologists, anesthesiologists, or neurosurgeons can perform a variety of procedures to help with pain, such as:

Psychologic treatment for pain management

Pain can consume a patient’s life and psychologic counseling may be a helpful adjunct in addition to other treatment options in helping control pain. Psychologists are important members of the pain management team.

Some treatment therapies that may be of help include the following:

What is the goal of pain management?

The goal of pain management for each patient is to minimize suffering and improve quality of life. This goal may be different depending on the patient’s circumstances and disease or injury. For example, the approach to a patient with a broken leg will be different than a patient at end of life in hospice requiring pain control. Both deserve dignity and pain minimization, but the plan will be different for each.

Being free of pain is not always achievable, but the goal of alleviating suffering, minimizing pain, and allowing quality life should be in reach of the patient in coordination with the members of their pain management team.

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Medically Reviewed on 12/7/2023

References

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National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine; Health and Medicine Division; Board on Health Sciences Policy; Committee on Pain Management and Regulatory Strategies to Address Prescription Opioid Abuse. Evidence on Strategies for Addressing the Opioid Epidemic. In: Pain Management and the Opioid Epidemic: Balancing Societal and Individual Benefits and Risks of Prescription Opioid Use, Phillips JK, Ford MA, Bonnie RJ (Eds), National Academies Press, Washington (DC) 2017. Accessed 24Nov2023
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