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BIG DANGEROUS PAINS
Norman Marcus, M.D.
Excerpted from
Bottom Line's Daily Health News, April 12, 2004
The headlines
are filled with stories of celebrities and "plain folk"
alike who become addicted to pain medications after suffering an injury.
While it is tempting to think that the sufferers are emotionally weak
or victims of their celebrity, according to Dr. Norman Marcus, founder
of the Norman Marcus Pain Institute in New York City, past president
of the American Academy of Pain Medicine and author of Freedom from
Pain, the
problems are real and related to the misunderstanding of chronic pain.
Everybody understands
acute pain. When you burn yourself or break a bone,
there are obvious physical signs. You experience the pain, and then
the
injury heals. You forget about it, and life goes on.
Chronic pain, on the other
hand, is not necessarily related to any current
tissue damage. Your injury may have healed, but you are still in
pain. It's much more complicated. People with acute injuries describe
their pain
with simple adjectives such as "sharp" and "shooting." When
those in
chronic pain describe how they feel, they are apt to use emotional rather
than physical language: "It's torturing me." "It's killing
me." "What did
I do to deserve this?"
Chronic Pain: Overwhelming
and Undertreated
Most people, even physicians,
can't identify with chronic pain unless they
also have had it, says Dr. Marcus.
People with chronic pain
look healthy on the outside but suffer terribly on the inside. Chronic
pain goes on and on, without obvious physical
manifestations. It affects you emotionally and demoralizes you.
You
feel as if there's no hope, and you lower your quality of life. You
may be
depressed and unable to sleep.
Dr. Marcus notes that
50 million to 60 million Americans suffer from chronic pain, and in his
view, undertreatment of this condition
is a major
problem. He believes that the best approach to controlling chronic
pain is
multidisciplinary -- a combination of therapies, such as medication,
physical treatment, stress reduction and psychological support.
Muscle Management
In many cases, all the
causes of chronic pain are not properly evaluated. The most common complaints
are low back pain, headaches,
neck, shoulder
and joint pain. All of these conditions may have a muscular component.
For
Dr. Marcus, the first line of diagnosis for chronic pain
involves looking at the physical condition of the patient. Much of the
body
is made of
muscle. In spite of this, most evaluations of pain do not
recognize muscles as a major cause. At Dr. Marcus's clinic, an effort
is made
to diagnose underlying muscle pain and to treat it with exercise,
massage, electrical stimulation techniques and his unique muscle-softening
injections.
-
Exercise. When
you're hurting, your first impulse may be to stay still until the
pain goes
away, but recent research indicates a link between
chronic pain and weak, atrophied muscles due to stiffness
and deconditioning. An important basic concept
in any exercise program is to
first relax the muscle, then move it in the range
of comfort (limber), then stretch and finally strengthen. Don't strengthen
without taking
these other steps first, or muscles will stiffen
even
more.
-
Massage. Massage
can benefit muscle tension and pain. It relaxes muscles and stimulates
blood flow through the muscles, sometimes better than
simple exercise.
-
Electrical stimulation.
This technique is important in the treatment of spasm and as a follow-up
to trigger
point injections. Neuromuscular
stimulation (NMS) can alleviate most spasms in four to
five days. This technique works by causing the muscle
in spasm to move passively, first
in a continuous (tetanizing) contraction
followed by a rhythmic contraction. Dr. Marcus also uses NMS following
muscular
injections to
facilitate healing.
-
Trigger-point injections.
Trigger points are painful, hardened knots that develop in muscles
after injury or repetitive strain.
These sensitive spots may lie dormant for years until physical
or emotional stress sets them off, triggering
pain and muscle spasms in the affected
muscle or even a distant muscle.
There is frequently more than one tender muscle in the painful area,
sometimes
causing confusion
as to
which muscle needs to be treated.
The Marcus Method can electrically identify the muscle causing the
most
pain and at the
same time avoid
unnecessary injections. There are
different techniques to treat trigger points -- Dr. Marcus's technique
is so
different that he calls it a
muscle softening injection. After
each injection, there is a physical therapy program to restore the
maximum
length of the
injected muscle.
With this technique, muscles are
rarely ever reinjected.
Stress
Reductions and Psychological Support
Stress is
one of the primary creators of muscle pain. When you're under stress,
muscles tense up
and pain
gets worse, notes Dr.
Marcus. Stress
management strategies
may include exercise, relaxation techniques, yoga, meditation, aromatherapy,
long walks,
music and
herbal baths. Choose one
that works best for you.
By reducing
stress, you can often alleviate the pain.
Depression Risk
Severe chronic
pain can lead
to anxiety and depression, which can cause or
intensify
the perception of pain. In certain cases, treatment for underlying psychological
disorders is
important and may
include
both
medication
(such as antidepressant
and antianxiety drugs) and psychotherapeutic
approaches. For example,
cognitive-behavioral
therapy
directly
addresses
pain-related thinking and
behavior to promote better coping skills.
Medication
for Chronic Pain and the Fear of Addiction
According to Dr. Marcus,
if nothing
can be
done to eliminate the underlying cause
of pain, the provision of pain-relieving
medication
that improves your ability
to function is a good and reasonable treatment. He
acknowledges that a
fear
of addiction to prescription drugs is
a concern but stresses that addiction is very different
from
physical dependence. Anyone who takes an opioid, such as codeine,
for four
days or more shows some signs of physical dependence,
he says. Addiction is a psychological state
in which the addict compulsively
takes
the drug for mood alteration and ignores the damaging effects of misuse
of the medication.
However, reasonable use of a pain medication under a doctor's
close
supervision
--
even
for extended
periods of time -- does not make a person an addict.Another important
fact
is
that there is no standard dose for a person
in pain. The dose is whatever amount relieves the
pain
without interfering with the ability to function. Addiction is
the
result of genetic factors and psychological predisposition. The vast
majority
of
patients receiving
prescribed painkillers do not get addicted.
The bottom line is you don't have
to suffer. There is a treatment
out there for you.
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