Archive for the ‘Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers’ Category

AUSTRALIAN CLINICS SURVEYED: TREATMENTS

There was an interesting statistical breakdown of psychotherapeutic treatments used by the clinics.

1. Relaxation; 80 per cent. This includes progressive muscular relaxation from head to foot, hypnosis and sometimes simple meditation techniques.

2. Operant conditioning/biofeedback; 35 per cent. Combining the encouragement of ‘well’ behaviour with relaxation techniques in which electronic techniques help patients learn to control those automatic functions of the body affected by stress.

3. Counselling/group therapy; 30 per cent. Individual counselling, group therapy with couples and family sessions are held to assess problems and offer some solutions.

4. Music therapy; 15 p’er cent. Some patients respond simply to sitting in a room with a therapist and playing music with tapes. Using certain pieces of music to elicit emotions can lead to overall improvement in mood and outlook.

5. Other techniques include electrostimulation 87 per cent, manipulation 73 per cent, massage 66 per cent, electro-analgesia and trigger-point therapy 40 per cent, hydrotherapy 33 per cent, acupuncture 27 per cent, and meditation 6 per cent.

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TERMINAL CANCER PAIN: THE GOAL OF PAIN THERAPY

Professor Foley says ‘The goal of pain therapy for patients receiving active treatment is to provide them with significant relief to tolerate the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches needed to treat the cancer.

‘For patients with advanced disease, pain control should be significant to allow the patient to function at a level they choose and to die relatively free of pain.’

Professor Foley believes the controversy surrounding the relief of cancer pain is mainly due to the reluctance by patients suffering cancer pain to accept potent drugs — and that of doctors to prescribe them. Doctors often deliberately limit the amount of pain-killers administered because of concern that cancer patients will become addicted.

A physical dependence does sometimes develop to the drugs. But this rarely reaches the level of the physiological dependence of regular drug addicts.

Patients will become physically dependent on a drug. They will develop signs and symptoms of withdrawal. But this isn’t the same as psychological dependence on the drug. We are taught that drugs are bad for people and so doctors are loath to administer them except in very advanced stages of the disease — and even then gradually.

Professor Foley believes the future of pain relief for cancer suffers is brighter. As well as drugs, pain can be effectively interrupted by nerve blocks — placing a needle around the selected nerve and adding a local anaesthetic.

Doctors can also surgically make a lesion at a place in the central nervous system where pain pathways are present and thus disrupt them with a procedure known as a cordotomy.

In the treatment of pain due to cancer, surgery of the nervous system has a relevance not seen in the treatment of benign or non-malignant pain.

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PAIN TREATMENT/CREATIVE IMAGINATION SCALE (CIS): WATER ‘HALLUCINATION’

Keep your eyes closed. By using your imagination constructively, you can experience the feeling of drinking cool, refreshing water. First, imagine that you’ve been out in the hot sun for hours and you’re very, very thirsty. Your lips are dry and you feel so thirsty. You’re so thirsty. Now, picture yourself on a mountain where the snow is melting, forming a stream of cool, clear water. Imagine yourself dipping a cup into this mountain stream so you can have a cool, refreshing drink of water. As you think of sipping the water, tell yourself it’s absolutely delicious as you feel it going down your throat, it is cold, beautiful and delicious. Feel the coolness and beauty of the sparkling water as you take a sip. Now, think of taking another sip of water and think of it going over your lips and tongue, going down your throat, down into your stomach. Feel how cool, refreshing, delicious and beautiful it is before taking another sip. So cool, cold, sweet, beautiful, delicious and refreshing. Think of taking another sip now and feel the cool water going into your stomach — so beautiful, cool, and wonderful. . . Absolutely delicious. . . Absolute pleasure.

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OTHER PAIN TREATMENTS: TENS THERAPY (ALSO CALLED TCNS OR TES)

Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation is a treatment derived initially from the observation that electricity applied to the skin could have profound effects in controlling pain symptoms.

TENS units are typically small, portable, sophisticated electronic devices which deliver a low-energy electrical pulse to the surface of the skin via electrodes. These electrodes may be semipermanent or may be used in combination with conducting gels.

The electrodes are placed over localised areas of pain or at distant areas which often correspond to acupuncture points.

The treatment is particularly useful in those conditions associated with abnormalities of the muscles or bones.

TENS therapy has also been found to be useful in the treatment of whiplash injury to the neck, repetitive strain injury (RSI) and chronic low back pain. TENS therapy has the advantages of being convenient, simple and safe. There are very few direct reasons not to use TENS therapy. But it should be used carefully in the area between the shoulders and the waist, and in pregnant women. TENS therapy is available through pain clinics, through general practitioners who have become acquainted with the technique, and through physiotherapists. Fortunately, increasing numbers of general practitioners are using TENS therapy in day-to-day pain management. One of TENS therapy’s greatest advantages is that it makes the patient independent of medical or para-medical supervision, making it a highly cost-effective method of treatment.

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