Title: Managing chronic pain
1Pain Management
2Role of GPs in Pain Management
- GPs can
- improve assessment and treatment of pain
- offer early intervention and treatment
- prevent chronic pain.
3General Principles of Pain Management
- Unrelieved pain has adverse severe physiological
/ psychological side effects - Proper assessment and control requires patient
involvement - Effective pain relief requires flexible,
individually tailored treatment - Pain is best treated early. Established severe
pain is more difficult to treat - Whilst it is not always possible to alleviate all
pain, it can be reduced to a tolerable or
comfortable level.
NHMRC (1999)
4Categories of Pain
- Acute monophasic pain
- Recurrent acute non-malignant pain
- Chronic malignant pain
- Chronic pain associated with non-malignancy
disease identifiable pathology - Chronic non-malignant pain syndrome.
5WHO 3-step Pain Relief Ladder
Treat with Opioid for moderatesevere pain /-
non-opioid /- adjuvant
3
Pain persisting or increasing
2
Treat with Opioid for mild-moderate pain /-
non-opioid /- adjuvant
Pain persisting or increasing
1
Treat with non-opioid /- adjuvant
Gill (1997)
6Pain Cycle
Psychological Social Consequences
Adapted from Gill (1997)
7Pain Rating Scales
- Most reliable indicator of pain severity is
patient self-report - Categorical rating scales use descriptors such
as no pain / mild pain / worst possible
pain - Visual analogue scales
- no pain worst possible pain
- Verbal analogue scales
- rate from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst possible).
8The GPPatient Relationship
- Successful management depends on
- patient trust confidence in GP
- complete physical and psychosocial history this
is essential so allow adequate time - supportive clear explanations of the pain
issues - ability to discuss strategies openly to reduce
potential for self-medicating - case management for consistency in management,
commence treatment with consultation between
patient and treating staff - trust avoid placebos at all costs
- adequate relief achieving relief / reducing
pain level is paramount.
9A Shared Care / Team Approach
- A team-based, holistic approach tends to be most
effective for pain management, involving - nurses
- psychologists psychiatrists
- physiotherapists
- pain specialists.
10Acute Pain Management and High-risk Drug Use
- Key Principles
- Unless patient uses opioids, treat as normal
patient with pain - First do no harm shortest dose, shortest
duration with minimal side effects, with aim to
reduce pain to a tolerable level - Maintain clear communication (prevent anxiety,
reassure patient) - Do not withhold analgesia unless medically
indicated - Avoid Pethidine
- Allow adequate time for assessment impossible
in 10 minute consultation.
11Acute Pain Management People who Inject Opioids
- Consider
- tolerance to opioid analgesics
- e.g., if already on regular prescribed opioid
medication (iatrogenic dependence), on methadone,
opioid-dependent, or regularly taking liver
enzyme-inducing drugs - real and perceived legal constraints for
prescribers - potential adverse interactions with other CNS
depressants - difficulties / misunderstandings which arise in
communications between clinicians and patients.
12Assessment of Chronic Pain in Drug-dependent
Patients (1)
- Comprehensive assessment required of
- organic pathology and psychosocial history /
supports - past / present drug use (alcohol and prescribed
drugs) - drug tolerance dependence
- contribution of pain drug use to mood
lifestyle? - whether the pain predates the drug(s) problem or
reverse? - psychiatric comorbidity chronic pain and
depression often coincide, but difficult to
disentangle cause effect - stressors and coping strategies.
13Assessment of Chronic Pain in Drug-dependent
Patients (2)
- Obtain information from other sources (p.r.n.)
- e.g., previous GP, other doctors, family, with
patients consent - 1/3 or more of patients with chronic pain have no
obvious organic disease but may feel genuine and
debilitating pain - If in doubt, err on the side of the patients
report.
14Opioids and Pain Management
- A true opioid allergy is very uncommon
- There is no evidence that use of opioids for
treatment of severe acute pain leads to
dependence / addiction - When opioids provide no relief, the pain may be
neuropathic in nature - Opioids for pain relief are most effective when
- tailored to the individual
- used in conjunction with NSAIDS.
15Prescribing Opioids and Drug-dependent Patients
(1)
- Use opioids with caution
- if opioid-dependent, high tolerance is likely,
and therefore need higher doses (not lower doses) - potential for adverse events /excessive sedation
- avoid injections and Pethidine (poor clinical
outcomes) - aim for regular fixed doses (better, cheaper
response compared with on-demand) - consider sustained-release forms.
16Prescribing Opioids and Drug-dependent Patients
(2)
- Controversy re prescribing methadone for the
opioid-dependent - Separate prescribing for dependence from pain
management issues (e.g., via shared care) so
that - patients are not confused about dose, types
purpose of prescribed drugs - drug doses can be adjusted to accommodate the
separate problems - staff fears of malingering can be allayed
- Analgesics are just part of an effective
management plan for chronic pain.
17Chronic Pain and Iatrogenic Dependence
- Definition
- dependence on medication following a period of
medically-initiated pain management - true extent of the problem is difficult to gauge
- treatment dose tapering or methadone
- prevention
- close supervision and monitoring of pain patients
- review medication frequently
- encourage alternative (non-drug) treatments to
complement medication.
18Chronic Pain Patients and Risk of Drug
Dependence
- Risk indicators may include
- personal / family history of high-risk patterns,
problems or therapy (including receiving MMT) - demonstrating abnormal illness behaviour, low
frustration tolerance, premorbid personality
problems, or poor coping skills - history of childhood abuse
- patients who describe euphoric effect from
prescribed opiates - current stressors
- complex compensable patients
- young patients with obscure pathology.
19Chronic Pain Patients and Suspected Drug
Dependence
- The following signs should alert you
- tolerance to prescribed opiates /- BZDs and
- intoxication, deterioration in function, ?
pain-associated distress - requesting scripts early
- withdrawal symptoms and signs medication(s) not
being taken - increased use of alcohol (increases sedation)
- requesting opiate-based analgesics (rather than
NSAIDS) - preoccupation with obtaining opioids despite
analgesia - evidence of doctor shopping, visits to E.D.,
hoarding supplies.
20Non-drug Complementary Strategies (1)
- Medications
- Other analgesics, antidepressants, anxiolytics,
tranquillisers and hypnotics, muscle relaxants,
antispasmodics, antihistamines, corticosteriods,
local anaesthetics etc. - Lifestyle adjustment
- exercise
- ergonomic work stations / change in tasks / roles
- relaxation / meditation
- Physiotherapy / hydrotherapy / radiotherapy
- Supportive counselling/CBT.
21Non-drug Complementary Strategies (2)
- Cognitive therapy
- changing beliefs / expectations, blocking
negative thinking - Behaviour therapy
- goal setting / problem-solving
- self-reinforcement
- diversion techniques
- Stimulation to relieve pain
- Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation
(TENS) - acupuncture
- vibration / massage.
22Pain Relief is the Overriding Consideration
- For the very elderly
- The terminally ill with a short life expectancy
-
Concerns of exacerbating drug dependence in
these situations are secondary
2310 Tips for Managing Patients with Chronic Pain
(1)
- 1. Define pain syndrome and treat cause (where
evident) - 2. Ensure Mx by single practitioner
- 3. Validate and accept patients pain experience
- 4. Establish clear, honest, open relationship
- 5. Make, and agree on, a clear treatment contract
- (cont)
2410 Tips for Managing Patients with Chronic Pain
cont. (2)
- 6. Educate and inform about your approach to pain
Mx - 7. Treat comorbidity with shared care team
- 8. Encourage alternatives to pharmacotherapy
- 9. Medication Mx one doctor, close monitoring
- 10. Monitor progress, compliance and symptoms and
maintain vigilance for evidence of dependence.
25Strategies for Managing Aberrant Behaviour
- Re-assess medication, expectations, underlying
cause - Consider changing drugs / ? interval between
supply - Reinforce discussions / contract
- Consider urine testing / warn of consequences of
continued behaviour - Wean or cease opioid use
- Notify health department / joint management with
drug treatment agency - Consider very frequent medication supply / MMT.