Chronic pain is not acute pain: forget the numerical pain scale

4 out of 5 stars Intensity of Chronic Pain — The Wrong Metric? Ballantyne JC, Sullivan MD. N Engl J Med 2015 Nov 26;373:2098-9. Full Text This short but very important “Perspective” article argues that numerical pain scales are absolutely the wrong way to evaluate and monitor  chronic pain. The authors point out that: Opioids . . . have good short-term efficacy, but there is little evidence supporting their long-term benefit. They note that the “titrate to effect” method that can be successful in treating acute or end-of-life (e.g., cancer) pain may not be appropriate or effective in cases of chronic pain: For many patients, especially those who have become dependent on opioids, maintaining low pain scores requires continuous or escalating doses of opioids at the expense of worsening function and quality or life. And for many other people, especially adolescents and young adults, increased access to opioids has led to abuse, addiction, and death. Evidence demonstrates that, brain-wise, chronic pain is a different beast than acute pain, reflecting not so much nocioception as emotional and psychosocial overlays. In those cases “[s]uffering maybe related as much to the meaning of pain as to its intensity.” With chronic pain the goal should be to reduce, not pain intensity, but the related suffering. Opioids and pain scales are counterproductive for efforts to reach that goal. Rather, chronic pain programs must address psychological and ph...
Source: The Poison Review - Category: Toxicology Authors: Tags: Medical acute chronic pain pain scale Source Type: news