Archive for the ‘Pain Diagnosis/Symptoms’ Category

Pain in Cancer Patients

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Many people with cancer experience pain. Thirty to 40 percent of patients in active cancer therapy and 70 to 90 percent of patients with advanced cancer report pain.

Cancer pain can be caused by:

Tumors pressing on organs, nerves or bone
Treatment such as surgery, chemotherapy or radiation
Other conditions related to the cancer, such as stiffness from inactivity, muscle spasms, constipation and bedsores
Conditions unrelated to the cancer, such as arthritis or migraine

In most cases, cancer pain can be controlled through relatively simple means. Doctors usually use medications, which are prescribed according to a plan that was first described by the World Health Organization and is called the Analgesic Ladder approach to cancer pain management.

Other ways to alleviate cancer pain include:

Surgery, radiation or chemotherapy to shrink tumors causing pain
Antibiotic therapy or drainage for pain caused by infection
Psychological therapies, and social and spiritual support, to influence the perception of pain
Other pain treatments

Beth Israel Medical Center, a major cancer care provider in New York City, has hundreds of cancer specialists in its network including top-rated surgeons, medical oncologists, physicians, radiation oncologists, radiologists, and oncology nurses.

Pain can exist everywhere in your body

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Chronic pain affects all aspects of life. It affects your quality of life as it limits your physical functioning, your ability to perform activities of daily living, and your ability to work. It has social consequences for your marital and family relationships, it may limit intimacy with your partner, and it may prevent interaction with friends. Chronic pain has societal consequences in terms of increased health care costs, increased disability costs, and lost productivity that is a consequence of missed workdays.

Given the pervasiveness of pain, it’s no wonder that chronic pain affects your psychological well-being as well.3 Research indicates that as number and severity of a patient’s physical symptoms increase, the number and severity of psychological complaints increase.4 In other words, the more places you feel pain and the more severe the pain, the more likely you are to have a depression or problems such as difficulty sleeping or anxiety and the more severe these symptoms are. Some of the signs and symptoms related to depression reported by chronic pain patients treated at pain clinics include:

  • physical deconditioning,
  • sleep disturbance,
  • reduced sexual activities,
  • family stress,
  • work issues,
  • legal issues,
  • financial concerns,
  • decreased self-esteem,
  • fear of injury, and
  • altered mood, including irritability, anxiety, and depression.5

Why do pain and depression co-exist so often? Scientists have been studying this relationship through neurosciences and epidemiology and have made important discoveries. First of all, both depression and the suffering of pain are located in the same area of the brain.6 Second, the same chemical messengers are involved in regulating pain and mood.7 What are the mechanisms that affect these parts of the brain and these chemical systems? We find that depression runs in families, so that the stress of having pain may trigger the chemical changes in the brain leading to depression in persons who may be vulnerable because of a family tendency (genetic) to depressive illness. More commonly, however, a person has no family vulnerability to depression, but may get “worn down” by all the stress, losses and problems encountered by having pain over many months.8 Either way, this “wearing down” is biochemical, such that certain important chemicals (similar to vitamins) that are responsible for regulating both pain and mood appear to be functionally depleted. This is why the same medications that are helpful in depression may also effectively treat pain, because they enhance the pain and mood regulating effects of these chemical systems in your brain.

Approximately 40% to 60% of patients being treated at pain clinics report experiencing symptoms of depression.9 Unfortunately, people experiencing pain do not always receive the treatment they need to combat their depression and their pain, especially if they do not see physicians with the training and background to treat both together (eg, pain medicine specialists, psychiatrists, or primary care physicians with this training). Given the nature of today’s health care system, most Americans receive mental health care by visiting their primary care physician, but research studies indicate that 50% of patients who are clinically depressed are not diagnosed by their primary care physicians.10 So be on the lookout for depression in yourself and loved ones and seek treatment before the negative effects occur.

Pain and Depression

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Pain and depression are inexorably linked in a complex way. Pain causes depression—depression causes pain. About 30% of patients with persistent pain conditions suffer from clinical depression related to their pain, and almost all persons will experience some mood changes. 75% of patients with clinical depression present to their doctors because of physical symptoms, including pain.1 People in pain who have symptoms of depression experience more impairment associated with pain than those who do not have depressive symptoms.2

To successfully treat your chronic pain, you and your physician need to examine the emotional factors that may influence your pain level and physical disability. One of the first steps to treating pain is recognizing that depression often accompanies pain and that increases in pain or widespread pain (ie, pain in many areas of your body) can be a symptom of depression. Understanding this aspect of your pain experience may help you identify your own symptoms and seek the care you need to lessen your pain.

Pain and Your Mental Health

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Pain so often is accompanied by loss—loss of function, loss of employment, loss of money, loss of friends and relationships to name just a few—it’s no wonder that people in chronic pain have an increased incidence of depression, anxiety, and sleep disturbances. It is natural to feel emotions ranging from fear, anger, denial, disappointment, guilt, and loneliness to hope and optimism. Every person reacts differently to pain at different times, which can make relationships and pain control difficult. The effect emotions and psychosocial well being have on pain cannot be ignored as emotions have a direct effect on your health. Taking care of the emotional aspects of chronic pain is necessary to treat your overall pain condition.