Chronic Pain - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 65
About This Presentation
Title:

Chronic Pain

Description:

Chronic Pain Andrew Skinner South Tees Hospitals & UHNT – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:286
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 66
Provided by: Window310
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chronic Pain


1
Chronic Pain
  • Andrew Skinner
  • South Tees Hospitals
  • UHNT

2
(No Transcript)
3
IASP definition of pain
  • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience
    associated with actual or potential tissue
    damage, or described in terms of such damage

4
Definition
  • Pain that outlasts the normal healing process
  • or
  • 12 weeks!

5
How common is it?
  • About 50 of the population
  • Back pain
  • Arthritis
  • Fewer have severe pain 15 of those with pain
  • Numerous papers of course
  • Elliott AM, Smith BH, Penny KI, Smith WC,
    Chambers WA. The epidemiology of chronic pain in
    the community. Lancet 1999 Oct 9354(9186)1248-52

6
But that is rather a lot
  • JCUH pain clinic covers about 500000 people, so
    that makes
  • 250000 with pain and
  • Perhaps 20000 with severe pain

7
What causes chronic pain?
  • Chronic clear cut problems that wont heal up by
    themselves
  • Arthritis
  • Cancer
  • Limb ischaemia
  • Things that are out of proportion
  • Funny things you cannot explain
  • Injuries to the nervous system
  • PHN
  • Tic
  • PSCP

8
What is the difference between acute and chronic
pain?
9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
Damage Pain Disability
12
Disease Symptoms Illness
13
Bio Psycho Social
14
(No Transcript)
15
What does this?
  • Fear
  • Anxiety
  • Health beliefs (toe vs chest angina)
  • Anger
  • Guilt
  • Depression
  • Learned behaviour (kids)
  • Litigation
  • Secondary gain

16
Chronic clear cut problems that wont heal up by
themselves
  • Easy
  • Diagnose
  • Treat
  • Cure
  • Pain killers!

17
Pain killers
  • We all know what comes next

18
Pain killers
19
Pain killers
  • Do you trust someone who cannot tell a staircase
    from a ladder?
  • Did you know it is only really intended as a
    teaching aid for cancer pain the pain tends to
    worsen?
  • Dont forget acute pain gets better more a
    snake than a ladder

20
Step one
  • Non opioids
  • Paracetamol basically
  • Aspirin?
  • The other NSAIDs?
  • Nefopam
  • (and just what the hell is nefopam?)

21
Step one
  • Paracetamol basically
  • It is safe, cheap and pretty side effect free
  • Regular might be better than as needed
  • Seems to have an opioid sparing effect
  • Which means opioid side effects sparing
  • I think aspirin is pretty good, but most people
    cannot take it long term
  • BNF Nefopam may have a place in the relief of
    persistent pain unresponsive to other non-opioid
    analgesics. It causes little or no respiratory
    depression, but sympathomimetic and
    antimuscarinic side-effects may be troublesome.

22
Step two
  • Weak opioids and co-whatsamols
  • Codeine
  • Dihydrocodeine
  • Tramadol (or is this step two and a bit?)
  • Meptazinol (or is this step one and a bit?)
  • The NSAIDs? (opinion varies)

23
Step two
  • Codeine and dihydrocodeine
  • Codeine is probably a prodrug
  • Morphine or C-6-G
  • Which is important as only the former has been
    studied in detail
  • But it doesnt seem to suit everyone
  • Dihydrocodeine
  • Opinion varies even more
  • But it might be stronger addicts seem to know
  • And you can get it MR

24
Step two
  • Tramadol suits some people
  • Meptazinol is an indicator we were running out of
    ideas, but occasionally hits the spot
  • Weak opioids seem to buy all the opioid side
    effects with fewer and lesser benefits

25
NSAIDs
  • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, usually
    abbreviated to NSAIDs, are drugs with analgesic,
    antipyretic and anti-inflammatory effects
  • They are the least safe of all analgesics and a
    lot of people rarely prescribe them long term

26
NSAIDs
  • GI bleeding and perforation
  • One of my long term patients died from this
  • Renal failure
  • Asthma
  • CVS risks
  • COX2?

27
NSAIDs
  • Used to be said they were good for
    musculoskeletal pains not visceral
  • But actually they just seem to be good pain
    killers
  • And patient killers
  • People argue about where on the WHO staircase
    they fit

28
Step three
  • Strong opioids
  • Morphine basically
  • Others

29
Step three
  • There is little convincing evidence that anything
    is reliably better than morphine
  • Some drugs suit some people, others other people
  • But you cannot predict which by type of person or
    type of pain

30
Step three
  • Not working?
  • Underdosed?
  • Adverse effects?

31
Step three
  • Sedation
  • Nausea
  • Constipation
  • Addiction or dependence
  • Itch
  • Hallucinations
  • Respiratory depression
  • Are they over treated?

32
Step three
  • Oxycodone
  • Fentanyl
  • Buprenorphine
  • Hydromorphone
  • Pethidine
  • Diconal
  • Palfium

33
Step three
  • Stick with one agent
  • Get the dose up
  • Treat the side effects
  • Jolly them along
  • Opioid switching isnt magic
  • Or perhaps it is?

34
Step three
  • Easy to decide for cancer pain
  • Less easy for chronic non cancer pain

35
Step three
36
Step three non cancer pain
  • No injections
  • Speak to primary/secondary care
  • Previous addiction caution not a ban
  • Medical practitioners only
  • Consent and contract
  • Single prescriber
  • Regular assessment pain as the end point
  • We control the dose
  • No breakthrough doses
  • No self escalation

37
TENs
  • Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulator
  • Works for some chronic pains about half
  • Harmless and cheap
  • Doctor free
  • Wears off
  • Good advice and persistence
  • Clearly ineffective for labour pains and acute
    pain

38
Things that are out of proportion
  • Bad back
  • Bad neck
  • Minor OA
  • You know what it is, but

39
Things that are out of proportionDisordered
interoception
  • ? FM
  • ?? CF
  • ??? IBS
  • ??? Chronic migraine
  • ??? Chronic cystitis
  • ??? Side effects of drugs
  • I. M. Hunt, A. J. Silman, S. Benjamin, J. McBeth
    and G. J. Macfarlane The prevalence and
    associated features of chronic widespread pain in
    the community using the Manchester definition
    of chronic widespread pain. Rheumatology
    199938275279

40
(No Transcript)
41
Funny things
  • Headache (except migraine)
  • Remember fear
  • Remember MOH
  • Facial pains (except Tic)
  • Remember diagnosis
  • Pelvic pains
  • Abdominal pains
  • Etc.
  • Etc.
  • You end up with symptomatic suggestions unless
    you get lucky

42
Post surgical pain
  • Is very common
  • Macrae W A. Chronic pain after surgery Br J
    Anaesth 2001 87 8898
  • And it is very difficult to treat
  • And often omitted from consent (anger) and
    thought of as indicating a problem (fear)
  • Recurrent pain after cancer surgery?

43
Neuropathic pain
  • Neuropathic isnt a synonym for difficult
  • Plausible cause
  • Right descriptors
  • Right distribution
  • Abnormal neurology
  • Nothing wrong where it hurts

44
Neuropathic pain
  • Idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia
  • PHN
  • Post amputation pains
  • Diabetic neuropathy
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Pain following chemotherapy
  • HIV infection
  • Alcoholism
  • Cancer
  • Injury and surgery
  • Various other uncommon nerve disorders.
  • PSCP

45
Neuropathic pain
  • Antidepressants
  • TCAs
  • SSRIs etc
  • Duloxetine
  • Burning
  • Nocturnal
  • Sleep poor

46
Neuropathic pain
  • Anticonvulsants
  • Gabapentin
  • Pregabalin?
  • The rest
  • The funny ones

47
Neuropathic pain
  • Mexiletine
  • Ketamine
  • Opioids
  • Oxycodone
  • Methadone
  • NMDA antagonist
  • Capsaicin
  • Cannabinoids
  • NOT TENS!

48
CRPS
  • RSD
  • Causalgia
  • Disuse phenomenon in part
  • OT physio
  • Neuropathic pain agents
  • Blocks

49
So what do we do?
  • Diagnosis
  • 8 OA hip
  • 6 vascular claudicants
  • Sarcoma of rib
  • Thalamic tumour
  • Ca breast
  • Myeloma
  • PMR
  • And refer of course

50
So what do we do?
  • Find out what the patient thinks and believes
  • Is the patients cognition driving the illness?
  • Are they depressed, anxious, angry etc?
  • Can we treat this?
  • Often psychologists are the first to really
    unearth patients beliefs

51
So what do we do?
  • Reconcile them that the orthodox medical model
    has failed
  • Look for under and over activity, cycling of
    activity
  • Consider rehabilitation or PMP

52
So what do we do?
  • Are there specific pain clinic treatments?
  • Remember nerve blocking clinics
  • TENs?
  • Medication
  • Support

53
Une Lecon Clinique a la Salpetrie
54
  • Can we learn to shape illnesses towards recovery
    rather than towards chronicity?

55
Actually of course modern medicine does just the
opposite
  • Diagnostic puzzle
  • Ultra specialists
  • Repeated negative consultations
  • Doctors despaired of me
  • No one can find what is wrong
  • Iatrogenic injury
  • Perhaps wed be less dismissive if we remembered
    it was often our fault, not the patients

56
Back pain - the clinical dilemma
Back pain can be a symptom of serious spinal
diseaseBUTMost back pain is due to backache,
not disease
57
How the health care system contributes to chronic
pain
  • inconsistent advice
  • lack of clear, understandable information
  • reluctance to abandon a curative model

58
Some common beliefs about chronic pain
- that it is due to serious disease, which has
been overlooked- that it is due to
serious,irreversible damage- that it means
being vulnerable to further injury- that it
will inevitably lead to increasing disability
/ dependency- that health staff do not believe
they are in pain
59
Underlying belief Hurt harm
  • understandable
  • true for acute conditions
  • basis of the medical model

60
Consequences of pain beliefs
  • increased distress - anxiety, anger,
    depression
  • changes in behaviour - increased consulting,
    seeking referrals or investigations, ill
    behaviour - bedrest
  • poorer outcome - more likely to drop out from
    rehabilitation, less likely to return to work

61
Fear avoidance model
Fear of pain (hurt, harm or both)
Avoidance - of whatever makes it worse
Survival value - evolutionary advantage
Acute conditions - limits damage, reduces
nociception
But Chronic conditions - barrier to
rehabilitation
(Lethem et al 1983)
62
Expectation of pain
- avoidance- no increase in pain- avoidance
reinforced
eg Belief that muscle pain damage
- expect pain with activity -
reluctant to exercise - avoid
mobilisation - drop out of
rehabilitation
(Feuerstein 1991)
63
Fear of pain
Confrontation
AvoidanceDesire to return to
Avoidance of physical /natural activities
social activitiesMobilise, exercise
Loss of spinal mobilityAccurate
interpretation Misinterpretation ofof pain
pain Effective
rehabilitation Increased disability
(Lethem et
al 1983)
64
Assessment of fear avoidance beliefs
  • Back Beliefs Questionnaire
    (Symonds et al 1996)
  • Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire
    (Waddell et al 1993)

65
www.eiderduck.co.uk/nurse.ppt
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com