Week 12 - Chronic Pain and Ways of Management Flashcards

1
Q

What is pain

A

A sensory and emotional experience with actual or potential tissue damage

Pain can be described in many ways:
1. Neuropathic = nerves affected (shooting / tingling pain)
2. Noiciceptive = tissues affected (sharp, throbbing, ache)
- can be somatic (soft tissue / m.skeletal) or visceral (internal organs)
3. Nociplastic = pain pathway is altered / no evidnec of damage
4. Acute or chronic
5. Primary (has no reason / underlying cause for pain)
6. Secondary (has underlying cause)
- treatment based on targeting this cause

Primary and secondary pain can exist together

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2
Q

What is the WHO pain ladder

A

Step 1 (MILD PAIN) = non-opioids
- paracetamol
- ibuprofen, aspirin, other NSAIDs

Step 2 (MODERATE PAIN) = weak opioids
- codeine
- tarmadol

Step 3 (SEVERE PAIN) = potent opioids
- morphine
- fentanyl
- oxycodone
- buprenophine

Can also ADD IN ADJUVANTS (in all steps)
- Anti-depressants
- e.g. TCA and SSRI
- Anticonvulsants
- e.g. pregablin
- corticosteroids
- to reduce inflamttion associated with pain
- ketamine
- can get hallucinations as it dissacoiates you from pain
- topical agents (NSAIDs, anaesthetics etc.)
- anxiolytics
- Benzodiazepine
- it reduces anxiety, helps you sleep
- relaxes muscle (which may be adding to pain)

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3
Q

What is Chronic Pain - NICE

A

Pain thats last >3 months
- diagnsosis requires investigation + clinical judgement
- ICD definition - is pain in one or more anatomical regions whcih causes significat emotional distress or functional disability, many factors contibute to primary pain

Have 2 types of pain:
1. Primary (no clear cause OR unprroportionate response)
2. Secondary ( has underlying condition causing pain)

3 Most common types:
- Back pain, Headache and Joint pain

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4
Q

What are the 4 types of primary chronic pain

A

Types of chronic primary pain:
- Visceral pain - internal central region of body
- Somatic pain - musculoskeletal pain (muscles, bone, joint)
- Headache
- Widespread pain - 4 or 5 regions

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5
Q

What are the 6 types of secondary pain

A
  1. Cancer related
  2. Neuropathic
  3. Post surgical / post-traumatic
  4. Secondary headache (e.g. migraine)
  5. Secondary visceral (e.g. IBS, endometriosis)
  6. Secondary somatic (musculoskeletal e.g. arthiritis)
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6
Q

How to asses chronic pain (primary and secondary)

A
  1. Person-centred assessment
    - how pain impacts their life
    - identify factors which may contribute to pain
    - shared decision making (explain benefits, risks of diff. treatment options)
    - give advice + info. on how they can manage it + improve QoL
    - develop care + support plans (with person, family, carer to meet set goals)
  2. Identify cause of pain
    - primary or secondary
    - injury or disease
  3. Impact of pain (gain more info.)
    - impact family life, day to day activities
    - impact physical + psychological well-being, relationships
    - consider socioeconomic status, ethnicity, age
    - acknowlege that they’re in pain, don’t invalidate their feelings
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7
Q

How to manage primary chronic pain: non-pharmacological - NICE guidelines

A
  1. Start with Non-pharmacological options
    1. Excercise programmes: 2-3 months (short-term)
    - encourage patient to carry on doing excercise learnt in supervised groups
    - excercise can ↓ pain + ↑ QoL (has both short and long-term impacts)
  2. Psychological Therapy
    1. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) - helps you accept you have pain + to live with it
    - MOST effective: ↑ QoL, sleep, pain + distress
    2. Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) - finding ways to cope with whats going on
    - ↑ QoL
    (risk of harm is minimal for both)
  3. Acupuncture (dry needling)
    - NO more than 5 hours (repeated courses dont have any benefits)
    - MUST be in community by approptiate HCP
    - short-term; ↓ pain (up to 3 months) then can do more long term options like excercise / therapy

OTHER:
Pain management programme (PMP)
Delivered with aseries of group sessions
- ↑ QoL BUT doenst reduce pain
- just advice on how to cope with pain; excercise, relaxtion, midfulness, group discussions

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8
Q

How to manage primary chronic pain: pharmacological - NICE guidelines

6 Anti-depressants

A

Anti-depressant
- For 18+ (16-17 need specialist advice)
- Takes 2-3 weeks to kick in (review in 4-6 weeks)
- Has many side effects at start
- ↑ risk of withdrawal the longer you are on it
- ↑ QoL, pain, sleep and distress (even without depression)
- PROBLEM: can have low sodium (with SSRis / SNRIs)
- need to do many blood tests to monitor

NOTE: NO evidence that adjuvants (in WHO pain ladder) will help treat primary chronic pain
- opioids, analgesics etc. no longer recommeneded as treatment by NICE

1st Line anti-depressants:
1. Amitriptyline
- blocks reuptake of seretonin + noradrenaline at pre-synaptic terminals
- has most anti-cholinergic side effects e.g. dry mouth, drowsiness
- start with lowest dose possible (5-10mg) then gradually ↑ dose
2. Citalopram
- 20mg daily, cheapest
3. Duloxetine
- 60mg most expenisve, has most benefit, less anti-cholinergic effects

OTHER OPTIONS
4. Fluoxetine
- 20mg daily
5. Sertraline
- 50mg daily
6. Paroxetine
- 20mg daily

NOTE: need to look at local guidelines

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9
Q

How to manage primary chronic pain: folowing up - NICE guidelines

6 Anti-depressants

A
  1. If patient has been taking treatment for primary pain that is no longer recommened by NICE (opioids, adjuveants):
    - use shared decision making to agree on a new shared plan
    - if report benefit of the medicine agree a plan to continue safely
    - if report lack of benefit explain risks of continuing + encouraging reducing / stopping medicine i.e. develop a staged reduction plan
    - explore other options
    - discuss withdrawal symptoms
  2. If taking analgesics or pain or comobidities alter:
    - check for adverse effects
    - adjsut dose or discontinue drug
    - confirm need + effectiveness of drug
    - review patients using anti-depressants regularly to ensure benefits outweigh risks

Requires multiple consultations
Provide patients with resources e.g. my pains concerns form, charities

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10
Q

How to manage secondary chronic pain - NICE guidelines

A

Treated according to its own NICE guideline

e.g. if pain is caused by arthirits treat according to arthiritis guidelines

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11
Q

What is Fibromyalgia

A

Long term conditon causing widespread pain (chronic pain all over body)
- CAUSE: malfunctioning CNS
- ↑ pain perception + ineffective pain inhibiton
- TRIGGERS: physical (infection/injury) + emotional (stress)
- TREATMENT: excercise, anti-depressants, physcological therapy
- can have genetic links
- more common in women
- develops between 25-55

  • Multiple body regions affected
  • Widespread pain; increasd sensitivity to pain, stifness, anxiety/depression, digestive issues
  • No inflammation
  • Symptoms can change
  • Difficult to diagnose
    - have no specific tests
    - DIAGNOSIS: min. 4-5 regions affected, pain scores, >3 months
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