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> Message: 4

> Date: Tue, 5 May 1998 03:16:40 +1000

>

> Subject: The Denial of Chronic Pain

>

> This was sent to my CFS/FM mailing list.

> It's quite long, but it's certainly well worth reading if you can manage

> it.

> Thankyou, Ken for your note about opiate-phobic doctors ... I'm sorry that

> you're in the same boat as me ... but then again, there's a certain relief

> in not feeling quite so alone in this " abandonment to pain " treatment.

> Kit.

>

> ----------

> From: Ted Shaw[sMTP:tedshaw@...]

> Sent: Saturday, 11 April 1998 13:34

> To: ozme@...

> Subject: The Denial of Chronic Pain

>

> " The Denial of Chronic Pain " by W Teasell

>

> http://www.pulsus.com/pain/02_02/teas_ed.htm

>

> W Teasell MD FRCPC

>

> There is a current disconcerting trend towards dealing with chronic pain

> and its subsequent disability by denying its reality. The reason for this

> has primarily been cost containment and cost reduction. The monograph on

> Back Pain in the Workplace probably best reflected this philosophy wherein

> pain was defined as activity intolerance and disability as unemployment

> (1).

> Recently Bill 99 in the Ontario legislature has put forward changes in the

> Workers' Compensation Board's provision that, in essence, limit patients'

> medical and compensation entitlements to anywhere from six to 13 weeks

> depending on the nature of their job. Responsibility for rehabilitation and

> getting the employee back to work would be transferred to the employer.

> Undoubtedly, accommodations by employers are essential in enabling injured

> workers to return successfully to some form of employment. However, under

> the new proposal, the employer is only responsible for trying to provide

> suitable or comparable work, and the temptation to deny workers' injuries,

> particularly in nonunion environments, will no doubt be high.

>

> This approach is a radical departure from previous policies. Models of

> chronic pain management through denial are based on the proposition that

> chronic pain occurs as a consequence of compensation and inappropriate

> treatment. Moreover, they emphasize the outmoded concept that soft tissue

> injuries heal after six weeks, and they cling to increasingly irrelevant

> behavioural models of chronic pain.

>

> The irony of these developments is that they come at a time when we

> understand the physiological basis of chronic pain better than ever before.

> As well, the concept that chronic pain is largely secondary to compensation

> or psychological factors has been largely refuted. Scientific evidence of a

> physiological causation for ongoing chronic pain is well recognized (2-4),

> and even the biopsychosocial model recognizes the importance of organic

> factors in chronic pain.

>

> Chronic pain disorders generally develop after a repetitive low impact type

> of trauma or a single high impact trauma. Much of the debate regarding

> persistent pain revolves around the normal anticipated time for

> musculoligamentous healing to occur. There has long been a misconception

> that all injuries should heal after six weeks. This rationale is based on a

> few animal studies and the clinical experience that the majority of

> injuries

> do improve within six weeks (5). However, clinical experience and follow-up

> studies (6,7) clearly demonstrate that not all patients necessarily get

> better and that there is a significant subset who continue to suffer from

> chronic symptoms. Some become disabled, depending on both pain intensity

> and

> psychosocial factors, such as the type of employment in which they are

> involved.

>

> Ironically, in sports medicine it is well recognized that many professional

> and nonprofessional athletes have longstanding injuries that are soft

> tissue

> in nature, which do not get better with time or which require many months

> of

> therapy and abstention from sports. Such injuries have terminated many

> promising careers. The legislation in Bill 99 for the Workers' Compensation

> Board of Ontario proposes standards for injured workers that could not be

> met by many professional athletes, despite that they are highly motivated

> and in top physical shape, have the best medical care and trainers and

> receive full compensation even when injured. Fortunately, such individuals

> are not included in this proposed legislation, which, if extended to

> prominent athletes, would result in a public outcry.

>

> The evidence that chronic pain has an organic etiology is growing and has

> become increasingly compelling. In the area of whiplash injuries, the work

> of Barnsley and associates (4) in Australia has been particularly

> interesting in that they were able to demonstrate that when local

> anesthetics are used to block cervical facets joints, a majority of

> appropriate patients experience reduction in their pain far in excess of

> that from placebo injections. In addition, Lord et al (8) have shown in a

> controlled trial that percutaneous neurotomies denervating these same facet

> joints will significantly reduce or eliminate the pain of these individuals

> for longer than six months. It is interesting that this highly impressive

> research is largely ignored outside of, and to some extent within, the

> academic community (5,9).

>

> There is also impressive evidence of significant biochemical abnormalities

> in disorders such as fibromyalgia; three independent studies demonstrated

> levels of substance P in the cerebral spinal fluid that were two to three

> times those in controls (10-12). As well, we know that, based on animal

> data, there is significant evidence of neuroplasticity in the spinal cord

> in

> response to pain stimuli, which could account for the clinical picture of

> regional pain syndromes (3,13). In these conditions, neurotransmitters such

> as substance P have also been implicated. More recently, altered regional

> cerebral bloodflow has offered opportunities to document a physiological

> concomitant of the patient's pain experience (14). Despite this impressive

> collection of physiological evidence about pain, the scientific evidence

> does not appear to be reaching legislators or clinicians who seem

> determined, based on ideology, to impose draconian alternative paradigms to

> deal with chronic pain and, in particular, its associated disability.

>

> To justify such an approach, psychosocial factors are often implicated as

> causative. However, a wave of recent research has demonstrated that

> psychological factors are more secondary to pain than causative (7,15-17).

> The high incidence of psychological problems seen in tertiary care clinics

> reflects tertiary care selection biases, and the literature, which largely

> arises from such clinics, clearly also displays this bias (18). In fact,

> the

> problem may be more related to the chronic pain patient's unwillingness to

> accept (and subsequently adapt to) their pain and its limitations (19).

> Psychological difficulties occurring as a consequence of the pain and

> subsequent disability are often misinterpreted as causative.

>

> Individual coping mechanisms vary but this is true in any medical disorder.

> Patients with rheumatoid arthritis can have significant psychological

> difficulties, and it has been suggested that psychological factors

> contribute to rheumatoid arthritis pain and functional disability,

> independent of disease activity (20,21). Among spinal cord injured patients

> with pain, over one-third of those who stopped working after the spinal

> cord

> injury said it was because of their pain and not their paralysis (22).

> Interestingly, pain was regarded by these patients as a significant cause

> of

> work disability, even when the individual had a more 'acceptable'

> alternative explanation (ie, paralysis) for work disability. It also

> suggests that in some patients, pain is regarded as more disabling than

> paralysis/paresis.

>

> The controversy about chronic pain and disability is inevitably tied to

> perceived secondary gain and the availability of compensation. Recent data

> suggest that compensation is important, particularly in terms of the number

> of claims, but that its importance has been overrated in terms of pain

> because it accounts for only a small degree of the variance seen (6% in one

> meta-analysis [23]). Its effect on claims is gradational, an expected

> relationship. On the other hand, 'secondary gain' is a vague term that has

> never been well explained (24). Anybody who treats these patients regularly

> realizes that the concept of secondary gain also has to be coupled with

> secondary losses, and most of these patients continue to have pain despite

> that secondary losses clearly exceed secondary gains (24,25).

>

> It is most disconcerting that the patients who will be affected by changes

> in legislation are those shown to be at highest risk of disability - namely

> those in lower socioeconomic groups, in particular those who are poorly

> educated, who lack transferrable skills, are older and who are more likely

> to perform heavy or repetitive physical labour (26,27) - most of whom would

> be classified as 'blue collar' workers or the 'working poor'. Many are

> immigrants with limited communication skills and/or working women who

> appear

> to be more susceptible to developing conditions such as repetitive strain

> injury, fibromyalgia and myofascial type pain. Attempts to deal with

> chronic

> pain disability as a social problem will serve only to target individuals

> who are especially vulnerable to withdrawal of support. This vulnerability

> is further enhanced by significant changes in the availability of work for

> individuals without specific technical skills and a decreased willingness

> on

> the part of employers to accommodate or compromise the workplace for

> injured

> workers. This is not only true for chronic soft tissue type pain but also

> is

> reported in conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis (20).

>

> Canada is becoming increasingly less sympathetic towards the weak, the

> poor,

> the injured and the disadvantaged. This Darwinian mindset sees such

> individuals as a drain on society and, in particular, contrary to the

> economics of profitable business. Certainly the cost of disability is an

> important factor that must be considered. However, we seem to have crossed

> a

> threshold where it is increasingly acceptable to demonstrate a lack of

> empathy or compassion for anybody who is injured and, in particular, those

> who have chronic pain. Governments not only fail to display compassion for

> injured workers, but displaying such compassion is seen as weakness for not

> staying the course of significantly reducing direct costs. As health care

> professionals and researchers we have an obligation to point out to our

> politicians and society in general that there is a significant human cost

> to

> proposed policy changes. Short-changing people when they are most

> vulnerable

> is going to increase suffering markedly while simultaneously swelling the

> welfare roles and transferring the problem to other jurisdictions. Although

> such measures may well force some individuals to return to work who might

> not have otherwise done so, the fact is that the vast majority of

> individuals are likely going to end up without resources at a time when

> they

> need them the most. Knowing what we now know about chronic pain, such an

> approach clearly strains the ethical responsibilities we have for

> individuals in our society who are limited by chronic pain.

>

> --------------------------------

>

> REFERENCES

>

> 1. Fordyce WE, ed. Back Pain in the Workplace. Seattle: IASP Press, 1995.

>

> 2. Merskey H. Regional pain is rarely hysterical. Arch Neurol

> 1988;45:915-8.

>

> 3. Coderre TJ, Katz J, Vaccarino AL, Melzack R. Contribution of central

> neuroplasticity to pathological pain: review of clinical and experimental

> evidence. Pain 1993;52:259-85.

>

> 4. Barnsley L, Lord S, Bogduk N. Comparative local anaesthetic blocks in

> the

> diagnosis of cervical zygapophysial joint pain. Pain 1993;55:99-106.

>

> 5. Spitzer WO, Skovron ML, Salmi LR, et al. Scientific monograph of the

> Quebec Task Force on Whiplash-Associated Disorders: redefining " whiplash "

> and its management. Spine 1995;20(Suppl):1S-73S.

>

> 6. Mendelson G. Not " cured by a verdict " . Effect of a legal settlement on

> compensation claimants. Med J Austr 1982;2:219-30.

>

> 7. Radanov BP, Sturzenegger M, DeStefano G, Schindrig A. Relationship

> between early somatic, radiological, cognitive and psychosocial findings

> and

> outcome during a one-year follow-up in 117 patients suffering from common

> whiplash. Br J Rheumatol 1994;33:442-8.

>

> 8. Lord SM, Barnsley L, Wallis BJ, Mc GJ, Bogduk N. Percutaneous

> radiofrequency neurotomy for chronic cervical zygapophyseal joint pain. N

> Engl J Med 1996;335:1721-6.

>

> 9. Ferrari R, AS. The whiplash syndrome - common sense revisited. J

> Rheumatol 1997;24:618-22.

>

> 10. Vaeroy H, Helle R, Forre O, Kass E, Terenius L. Elevated CSF levels of

> substance P and high incidence of Raynaud's phenomenon in patients with

> fibromyalgia: new features for diagnosis. Pain 1988;32:21-6.

>

> 11. IJ, Orv MD, Littman B, et al. Elevated cerebrospinal fluid

> levels of substance P in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome. Arthritis

> Rheum 1994;37:1593-601.

>

> 12. Mountz JM, Bradley LA, Modell JG, et al. Fibromyalgia in women.

> Abnormalities of regional blood flow in the thalamus and the caudate

> nucleus

> are associated with low pain threshold levels. Arthritis Rheum

> 1995;38:926-38.

>

> 13. Mense S. Referral of muscle pain. Am Pain Soc J 1994;3:10-2.

>

> 14. Bradley RA, Alberts KR, Alarcon GC, et al. Abnormal brain regional

> cerebral blood flow (rCBF) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of

> substance

> P (SP) in patients and non-patients with fibromyalgia (FM). Arthritis Rheum

> 1996;39:S212.

>

> 15. Gamsa A. Is emotional status a precipitator or a consequence of pain?

> Pain 1990;42:183-95.

>

> 16. Gatchel RJ, Polatin PB, Mayer TG. The dominant role of psychosocial

> risk

> factors in the development of chronic low back pain disability. Spine

> 1995;20:2702-9.

>

> 17. Bogduk N, Lord S, Wallis B. The treatment of psychological distress in

> patients with chronic neck pain after whiplash. 1997 Spine Society of

> Australia Scientific Meeting, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, May 1997.

>

> 18. Crook J, Tunks E. Defining the " chronic pain syndrome " : An

> epidemiological method. In: Fields HL, Dubner R, Cervero F, eds. Advances

> in

> Pain Research and Therapy, vol 9. New York: Raven Press, 1986:871-7.

>

> 19. Reitsma B, Meijler WJ. Pain and patienthood. Clin J Pain 1997;13:9-21.

>

> 20. Reisine ST, Grady KE, Goodenow C, Fifield J. Work disability among

> women

> with rheumatoid arthritis. Arthritis Rheum 1989;32:538-43.

>

> 21. Reisine S, McQuillan J, Fifield J. Predictors of work disability in

> rheumatoid arthritis patients. A five year follow-up. Arthritis Rheum

> 1995;38:1630-7.

>

> 22. Rose M, JE, Ells P, Cole JD. Pain following spinal cord

> injury:

> results form a postal survey. Pain 1988;34:101-2.

>

> 23. Rohling ML, Binder LM, Langhinrichsen-Rohling J. Money matters: A

> meta-analytic review of the association between financial compensation and

> the experience and treatment of chronic pain. Health Psychol

> 1995;14:537-47.

>

> 24. Fishbain DA. Secondary gain concept. Definition problems and its abuse

> in medical practice. Am Pain Soc J 1994;3:264-73.

>

> 25. Freeman DW. Sick rule dynamics and chronic back pain in the injured

> worker. Seventh World Congress on Pain, Paris, France. 1993;315:108. (Abst)

>

> 26. Leavitt F. The physical exertion factor in compensable work injuries. A

> hidden flaw in previous research. Spine 1992;17:307-400.

>

> 27. Yelin EH, Henke CJ, Epstein WV. Work disability among persons with

> musculoskeletal conditions. Arthritis Rheum 1986;29:1322-33.

>

> --------------------------------

>

> Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Western

> Ontario and London Health Sciences Centre, London, Ontario

>

> Correspondence: Dr W Teasell, London Health Sciences Centre, 339

> Windermere Road, London, Ontario N6A 5A5. Telephone , fax

> , e-mail robert.teasell@...

>

> Received for publication June 27, 1997. Accepted July 4, 1997

>

> --------------------------------

>

> ---------------------------------------------------------------

> Ted Shaw - tedshaw@... Phone/Fax (079) 381 277

> 28 Street Mt. , Queensland Australia 4714

> Home Page: http://www.networx.com.au/mall/cfs

> ---------------------------------------------------------------

>

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>

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