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ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN: IDEAS OLD AND NEW

ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN: IDEAS OLD AND NEW. John D. Loeser, M.D. February 22, 2019 Benton/Franklin County M edical S ociety. I have no conflicts of interest or sponsorships to report.

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ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN: IDEAS OLD AND NEW

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  1. ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN: IDEAS OLD AND NEW John D. Loeser, M.D. February 22, 2019 Benton/Franklin County Medical Society

  2. I have no conflicts of interest or sponsorships to report.

  3. HEALTH CARE IS A SOCIAL CONVENTION. NOWHERE IS THIS BETTER DEMONSTRATED THAN THE ROLE OF OPIOIDS IN THE TREATMENT OF ACUTE AND CHRONIC PAIN. SO, WE NOW MUST LOOK AT ALTERNATIVES TO OPIOIDS.

  4. IOM REPORT 2011 116 million adults in U.S. with common chronic pain conditions; $590 to $635 billion annual cost.

  5. WHAT IS PAIN?

  6. An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage. “IASP Definition” Pain 1986

  7. THERE IS NO TANK INTO WHICH ONE CAN PLACE A DIPSTICK TO MEASURE PAIN.

  8. Pain requires consciousness; it is an emergent property of the human brain.

  9. ALL PAIN IS REAL. MALINGERING IS A VERY RARE DISEASE.

  10. CONCEPTS ARE IMPORTANT FOR DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT AND MEASUREMENT

  11. TYPES OF PAIN Transient Pain Acute Pain Chronic Pain

  12. TRANSIENT PAIN Elicited by the activation of nociceptors in the absence of tissue damage. It is ubiquitous in everyday life and rarely a reason to seek health care. Relevant only to procedural pain, this is not a major issue in clinical medicine. It has, however, been the subject of most experimental pain paradigms in man and animals until very recently.

  13. ACUTE PAIN Elicited by injury to the body and activation of nociceptive transducers at site of damage. Local injury alters the characteristics of nociceptors, their central connections, and the autonomic nervous system in the region. Healing of damaged tissue occurs with restoration of normal nociceptor function. Common medical problem: health care can block pain and facilitate healing.

  14. ACUTE PAIN IS USUALLY DUE TO TISSUE DAMAGE AND IS NOCICEPTIVE. NOCICEPTION CAN PERSIST FOR DAYS, MONTHS OR EVEN YEARS.

  15. ACUTE PAIN CAN PERSIST OVER LONG PERIODS OF TIME AND NOT BECOME “CHRONIC” • Degenerative arthropathy of knee or hip • Unrecognized infection • Unhealed fracture REMOVING THE SOURCE OF NOCICEPTION CAN CURE THE PAIN

  16. “Nature heals, and doctors get the credit”. Voltaire THE SECRET OF ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT

  17. MANAGING NOCICEPTIVE PAIN REDUCE THE TISSUE DAMAGE BLOCK THE NOCICEPTION FROM REACHING THE CONSCIOUS CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM HASTEN THE HEALING PROCESSES

  18. MANAGING NOCICEPTIVE PAINS-1 • Physical measures • Rest • Massage • Graded exercise • Stimulation (electrical, mechanical, chemical • Cold or heat

  19. MANAGING NOCICEPTIVE PAINS -2 • Psychologic measures • Distraction • Virtual reality • Coping skills • Stress management • Education • Cognitive/Behavioral Therapies

  20. MANAGING NOCICEPTIVE PAINS-3 • Pharmacologic measures • Non-steroidals • Opioids • Anticonvulsants • Muscle relaxants • Benzodiazepines • Ketamine • Clonidine • Cannabinoids • Topical agents

  21. CHRONIC PAIN BETTER DESCRIBED AS PAIN PERPETUATED BY CENTRAL PROCESSES

  22. CHRONIC PAIN • Triggered by injury or disease • Perpetuated by factors other than those that started the pain • Body unable to heal because of nerve injury or loss of body part • Stress, affective, and environmental factors likely to play a large role.

  23. CHRONIC PAIN • Not well managed by Cartesian concepts. • Requires a bio-psycho-social model. • May be induced by CNS changes in response to injury that are not reversible even though healing occurs. • Modulation can be detrimental or beneficial, hence role for psychological therapies.

  24. MANAGING CHRONIC PAINS • Centrally acting drugs • Education • Physical measures • Psychological strategies

  25. Doctors pour drugs, of which they know little, for diseases of which they know less, into patients—of which they know nothing. Voltaire

  26. RAPID RETURN TO NORMAL ACTIVITIES Bed rest is badfor your health.

  27. Recommend a gradual and progressive increase in physical activities on a quota system. Never “…let pain be your guide”.

  28. Educate the patient: HURTAND HARM ARE NOT SYNONYMS.

  29. PASSIVE THERAPIES ARE OF LITTLE VALUE.

  30. Recommendation: Self-care and education Provide patients with evidence-based information about their expected course, advise patients to remain active, and provide information about effective self-care options. 31

  31. TYPES OF CHRONIC PAIN • Associated with cancer • Associated with nerve injury • Associated with systemic illness • Unknown causation • Palliative care and chronic pain

  32. Anything you know that works for acute pain is likely to harm a patient with chronic pain. The only thing they have in common is the four letter word, pain.

  33. Acute and chronic pain share only the four-letter word, “pain.” Their pathogenesis and treatments are dissimilar. Confounding acute and chronic pain leads patients into clinical disasters.

  34. The Opioid Epidemic • Unique to the United States • Prescription opioid excesses contributed • Mortality has shifted from oxycontin to heroin laced with fentanyl • Role of illegal marketing of oxycontin • Role of inadequate education of physicians about pain and opioids

  35. WHAT HAS THE AMERICAN OPIOID EPIDEMIC BROUGHT US? GUIDELINES AND REGULATIONS: FEDERAL, STATE, LOCAL, HOSPITAL

  36. WA State Opioid Prescribing Rules • “Inappropriate” rx: nontreatment, undertreatment, overtreatment and continued use of ineffective therapies. • All prescribers must register with WA PDMP. • Must inform patients of risks and benefits of opioids whenever prescribed. • Never opioids with benzodiazepines, etc • CME: 1 hour per lifetime for acute pain and 4 hours for chronic pain rx

  37. OPIOID RULES DO NOT APPLY TO: • Inpatients • Procedural pre-medications • Patients with cancer pain • End-of-life care, hospice, palliative care

  38. OUTPATIENT PRESCRIPTIONS • Aim for 3 days or less of opioids • Never more than 7 days without documentation • At 6 weeks must assess misuse or abuse • At 12 weeks, mandatory consultation, naloxone • “Legacy patient” has a 3 month grace period for tapering

  39. DO NOT LOSE SIGHT OF THE PHYSICIAN’S PRIMARY ROLE:THE RELIEF OF PAIN AND SUFFERING.

  40. BERTRAND RUSSELL VISITED THE DENTIST WITHA TOOTHACHE “Where does it hurt?” the dentist asked.

  41. “In my mind,” the philosopher replied. “Does anybody believe that a tooth (or a back) is capable of hurting?”

  42. THANK YOU

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