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Acute and Chronic Pain

The Two Faces of Pain: Acute and Chronic

What is pain?  The International Association for the Study of Pain defines it as: an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage.

It is useful to distinguish between two basic types of pain, acute and chronic, and they differ greatly.

Acute pain, for the most part, results from disease, inflammation, or injury to tissues.  This type of pain generally comes on suddenly, for example, after trauma or surgery, and may be accompanied by anxiety or emotional distress.  The cause of acute pain can usually be diagnosed and treated, and the pain is self-limiting, that is, it is confined to a given period of time and severity.  In some rare instances, it can become chronic.

Chronic pain is widely believed to represent disease itself.  It can be made much worse by environmental and psychological factors.  Chronic pain persists over a longer period of time than acute pain and is resistant to most medical treatments.  It can – and often does – cause severe problems for patients.  While acute pain is a normal sensation triggered in the nervous system to alert you to possible injury and the need to take care of yourself, chronic pain is different.  Chronic pain persists.  Pain signals keep firing in the nervous system for weeks, months, even years.  There may have been an initial mishap — sprained back, serious infection, or there may be an ongoing cause of pain — arthritis, cancer, ear infection, but some people suffer chronic pain in the absence of any past injury or evidence of body damage.  Many chronic pain conditions affect older adults. Common chronic pain complaints include headache, low back pain, cancer pain, arthritis pain, neurogenic pain (pain resulting from damage to the peripheral nerves or to the central nervous system itself), psychogenic pain (pain not due to past disease or injury or any visible sign of damage inside or outside the nervous system).

Medications, acupuncture, local electrical stimulation, and brain stimulation, as well as surgery, are some treatments for chronic pain.  Some physicians use placebos, which in some cases has resulted in a lessening or elimination of pain.  Psychotherapy, relaxation and medication therapies, biofeedback, and behavior modification may also be employed to treat chronic pain.

Many people with chronic pain can be helped if they understand all the causes of pain and the many and varied steps that can be taken to undo what chronic pain has done.  Scientists believe that advances in neuroscience will lead to more and better treatments for chronic pain in the years to come.

 

Source: excerpted from “Pain: Hope Through Research,” NINDS. Publication date December 2001. NIH Publication No. 01-2406 and the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, NIH

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