Pain Is Complicated


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Title Memo

Pain in its many forms is complex and non-intuitive. Information describing difficulties and uncertainties in diagnosing painful conditions. This seems to raise questions and suggest answers.

Note Text: 1195 Specificity theory

The traditional theory of pain is known as 'specificity theory'. It is described in virtually every textbook on neurophysiology, neurology and neurosurgery, and is often taught as fact rather than theory. It is presented as though we already have the major answers to pain problems, and all that remain are a few minor qu....

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 149-156

Note Text: 516 Correlates of knee pain

Persons with severe knee OA are more likely to report pain, and severe pain has been shown to predict radiographic changes in persons with knee OA. Studies of knee OA consistently highlight the relationship of older age, female sex (although this depends on age), and obesity with symptoms, associations that have also b....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 240

Note Text: 296 Disc pain

No other [aside from the McKenzie diagnostic approach related to centralization] assessment, including [MRI] or discography, could reliably identify the disc as the cause of pain and interventions to treat disc pain have proved disappointing.

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 298

Note Text: 1329 Ex. of occult physiological markers

Vulvodynia occurs in the absence of any clinically identifiable physical or neurologic findings. Biopsies taken from the vulvar vestibule of sufferers revealed unique physiological characteristics such as increased immunoreactivity, nociceptor sensitivity, and even increased density of superficial nerve endings. (www.pe....

Jantos, Marek, "Understanding Chronic Pelvic Pain", Pelviperineology: 2007

Note Text: 648 Experimental pain in chronic pain patients

[NOTE reference to "subliminal stimulation."] Such studies [comparing the reaction of chronic pain patients to non-patients] have been performed predominantly in patients with so-called functional pain syndromes, including fibromyalgia, IBS, and vulvovestibulitis. In line with the generalized hyperalgesia that is obser....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 122-3

Note Text: 323 For or against MFP

...informal observation supports the view that some clinicians diagnose MFP in a very high proportion of patients with musculoskeletal pain, whereas others use the diagnosis much less frequently (and still others essentially do not consider MFP to be a legitimate medical diagnosis.) [MFP = myofascial pain]

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 321

Note Text: 388 Framework for evaluation subjectivity

No one has developed a widely accepted framework in terms of which to conceptualize pain complaints that are not easily explained in terms of biological dysfunction, but a prudent physician should consider the following general categories: 1. The patient's pain may be a manifestation of a pathophysiological process that....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 437

Note Text: 735 Genetics and pain

[Discusses discovered genetic variation and engineered variation.]

Gatchel, R. J., Peng, Y. B., Peters, M. L., Fuchs, P. N., and Turk, D. C., "The BioPsychoSocial Approach to Chronic Pain: Scientific Advances and Future Directions", Psychological Bulletin, Vol. 133, No. 4: 2007 (Biopsychosocial Approach to Chronic Pain.pdf), 7-9

Note Text: 513 Hip pain clinical findings

...although structural damage of the hip joint was evident in patients seen by primary care practitioners for hip pain, no association between the level of damage and impact on the individual's quality of life was found. However, nearly one-quarter of the individuals in the previous study who consulted with primary car....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 239

Note Text: 106 Individual's history

The individual's personal history, situational factors, interpretation of the symptoms and resources, current psychological state, as well as physcial pathology, all contribute to the patient's response to the question "How much does it hurt?"

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, xii

Note Text: 294 Leg pain with LBP

Leg pain is a regular feature associated with LBP. However, not all leg pain is indicative of nerve root pain. Pain in the muscles of the lower back can be associated with pain radiating into the legs.

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 297

Note Text: 122 Low correlation

One possible factor contributing to the apparent lack of correlation among pathology, symptoms, and outcome [pain or disability level] is the observation that the reliability of many physical examination procedures is questionable.

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 9

Note Text: 686 Mechanism of persistent changes in processing

Following full-thickness skin wounds, hyperinnervation of the wound site by both myelinated A and unmyelinated C fibers is significantly greater in neonatal than in adult rats. This occurs independently of sensory neural activity and may depend on the release of neurotrophins from the damaged regions or a site-specific....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 155

Note Text: 252 Medical evaluations

[Medical evaluations tend to look for specific identifiable peripheral pathologies that can explain some or all symptoms.] In reality, medical evaluations of patients with chronic pain often yield ambiguous results, and do not lead to dramatically effective treatment [otherwise the symptoms wouldn't persist for seven y....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 191

Note Text: 245 Medical limbo

...the experience of medical limbo (i.e., the presence of a painful condition that eludes diagnosis and that carries the implication of either psychiatric causation or malingering on the one hand, or an undiagnosed potentially disabling condition on the other) is itself the source of significant distress and can....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 188

Note Text: 826 Mindbody epidemics

[Chronic pain syndromes are a modern epidemic of mindbody origin which is not helped and may even be aided by medical standard care.] The persistence of the pain--the fact that it often lasts for months or even years--is explained by an ingenious idea conceived by behavioral psychologists many years ago. According to t....

Sarno, J. E., "The Divided Mind: The epidemic of mindbody disorders", Harper, 2006, 19-20

Note Text: 212 Mr. Smith

Mr. Smith was having great difficulty tolerating the physical examination. Despite the fact that he had few physical findings, Mr. Smith complained bitterly of chronic back pain. He flinched visibly when the examiner palpated his back. His movements were slow, and he limped in an exaggerated fashion when asked to wal....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 135

Note Text: 1128 Multiple contributors in path. pain syndromes

The pain, in these syndromes, cannot be attributed to any single cause. There are, instead, multiple contributions. The cutaneous input from the affected part of the body obviously plays an important role. However, inputs that result from sympathetic activity are also important. So too are inputs from the auditory and v....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 75-6

Note Text: 1466 No effective drug treatment for CLBP

Furthermore, while the few short-term (only weeks in length) placebo-controlled trials conducted to date have found some support for the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and antidepressants in treating lower back pain, their results are usually not significant enough to reach the level of clinical e....

Apkarian, A. V., Baliki, M. N., and Geha, P. Y., "Towards a theory of chronic pain", PMC: 2008 (Towards a theory of chronic pain.html)

Note Text: 295 Nonspecific LBP

Patients, following initial assessment, are often classified as having "nonspecific LBP." There are many professional attributions for the cause of LBP and some would challenge the idea that LBP is ever "nonspecific," citing pain arising from the disc, muscle activity, and facet joint involvement. A recent review sugg....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 298

Note Text: 1225 Pain as homeostatic/failure of control

Some pains are best understood as a failure of control. When pain exists and a drug, a surgical lesion, physiotherapy or psychotherapy are initiated, the remaining control mechanisms will react in an attempt to re-establish the pain. This reaction may provide an explanation common to all eventual failures of therapy. A....

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 206

Note Text: 1079 Pain without injury

Tension headache is a common form of pain which ranges in intensity...there is no damage and no known explanation of the origin of the pain. It was widely believed that muscle tension was the cause, but no muscles have been found in contraction in spite of a very careful search. Another common headache, migraine, was as....

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 9

Note Text: 1296 Pain-spasm-pain....

Collectively, the data show that a muscle spasm is not due to a painful lesion in that muscle but rather to a lesion in another structure. The original source of the pain may be located in another muscle, a joint that is moved by the muscle, or an internal organ. The rigid abdomen that may accompany an inflamed appendix....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 627

Note Text: 687 Persistent changes in pain processing

The influence of early pain experience on the developing CNS is likely to reach beyond the classic pain pathways. The overlap between pain and reward pathways suggests that neonatal pain experience may influence reward-related pathways and behavior in adulthood, and recent evidence in an animal model of motivational be....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 155

Note Text: 382 Problems for examiner

First, some patients (e.g., those with fibromyalgia or chronic headaches) may not have any unequivocally objective findings. Second, and far more important, even when patients have objective findings, the findings rarely explain the extent of the incapacitation the patients report. [Why would the 2nd item be far more i....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 436

Note Text: 1160 Prolonged tenderness mechanism

We have reviewed evidence that prolonged tender states are produced by the massive release of peptides on to substantia gelatinosa cells. It has now been discovered that such compounds can produce striking changes of slow onset and very long duration, so that ionic channels in the nerve cell membrane and enzymes within....

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 107

Note Text: 1122 Psycho amputees

[!!!!]Because of the failure of traditional surgical therapy, it has been suggested that the patients are in pain because of psychopathological personal needs. It is true that patients suffering phantom limb pain often have emotional disturbances such as anxiety about social adjustment. Indeed that intense, unrelenting....

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 68

Note Text: 1468 Radiographs don't show cause of LBP

The probability that the particular cause of back pain can be identified by radiographs is less than 1%

Apkarian, A. V., Baliki, M. N., and Geha, P. Y., "Towards a theory of chronic pain", PMC: 2008 (Towards a theory of chronic pain.html)

Note Text: 1132 Resistance to surgery of path. pain syndromes

The widespread distribution of the neural mechanisms associated with these pain states is also indicated by the frequent failure to abolish pain by surgical methods. Surgical lesions of the peripheral and central nervous systems have been singularly unsuccessful in abolishing these pains permanently.

Melzack, R. and Wall, P. D., "The Challenge of Pain (Reprint of 1988 edition)", Penguin Books, 2008, 76-7

Note Text: 619 Sex difference in spinal processing

Sexual dimorphism in neuronal function has been demonstrated from fruit flies to humans and also has major effects on nociception. Females tend to have lower thresholds for heat-, mechanical-, inflammtion-, and chemical-induced pain. Some, but not all, studies have revealed that females are also more prone to the deve....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 109

Note Text: 854 Psychogenic pain

As is frequently the case in medicine, when physical evidence and explanations prove inadequate to explain the symptoms, psychogenic alternatives are proposed. If the pain reported by a patient cannot be objectively confirmed, is judged to be disproportionate to objectively determined physical pathology, or if the compl....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 256

Note Text: 228 Reactive specificity

Reactivity [physiologic] is symptom-specific and not general, as has been shown by the assessment of additional physiological parameters, such as heart rate, blood pressure, and skin conductance.

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 154

Note Text: 341 Somatoform disorders

The essential feature of the somatoform disorders is the presence of physical symptoms that suggest a general medical condition but are not fully explained by a general medical condition....The somatoform disorders are distinguished from fictitous disorders and malingering in that the symptoms are not intentionally prod....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 407

Note Text: 1247 Staff reactions

The staff of the emergency room thought that 40 percent were making "a terrible fuss," nearly 40 percent were "denying" pain, and 20 percent gave the "appropriate" answer. It is obvious there is something fundamentally wrong here....

One crucial aspect is that patients are not only assessing their private misery but....

Wall, Patrick, "Pain: The science of suffering", Columbia University Press, 2000, 12

Note Text: 1386 Summary of CBT approach

A significant percentage of individuals with persistent pain continue to experience distressing symptoms despite our increased knowledge of neurophysiology and the availability of an expanded treatment armamentarium. This set of circumstances had resulted in growing awareness of the important roles of cognitive, affecti....

Turk, Dennis C., and Flor, H., "The Cognitive-Behavioral Approach to Pain Management", Chapter 42 of McMahon et al. 2013, 2013, 592

Note Text: 862 The power of beliefs

As part of a comprehensive assessment, chronic pain patients were asked whether their symptoms were precipitated by trauma such as an automobile accident or whether they had an insidious onset. Approximately 50% of the patients attributed their symptoms to trauma.

Based on physical examination, there were no signif....

McMahon, S. B., Koltzenberg, M., Tracy, I., and Turk, D. C., "Wall and Melzack's Textbook of Pain", Elsevier Saunders, 2013, 258

Note Text: 271 Wide range of function

...even if a diagnosis can be made, the diagnosed condition is usually compatible with a wide range of functional capabilities....The patients who come to the attention of pain physicians are those who demonstrate high levels of disability relative to the diagnosed medical condition. [Why would that be the case? Wouldn....

Turk, Dennis, and Melzack, Ronald, "Handbook of Pain Assessment", The Guildford Press, 2011, 200

Note Text: 1696 Pain sensation and suffering are separate

Certain neurological conditions involve intense and frequent pain. One example is trigeminal neuralgia, also known as tic douloureux. The term neuralgia stands for pain with a neural origin, and the term trigeminal refers to the trigeminal nerve, the nerve which supplies face tissues and which ferries signals fr....

Damasio, Antonio R., "Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain", Penguin Books, 1994, 265-6

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