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Title: Chapter 16 PAIN


1
Chapter 16PAIN
  • D.F.Marks, M.Murray,
  • B.Evans, C.Willig, C.Woodall
  • C.M. Sykes (2005)
  • Health Psychology Theory, Research Practice
  • (2nd edition). London Sage.
  • Starred authors feature in video-clips

2
PAIN
  • Introduction
  • Theories of pain
  • Psychological aspects of pain
  • Socio-cultural influences on pain
  • Assessment
  • Management
  • Summary

3
INTRODUCTION
  • Pain is a uniquely personal human experience,
    which has been defined in many ways
  • An aversive, personal, subjective experience,
    influenced by cultural learning, the meaning of
    the situation, attention and other psychological
    variables, which disrupts ongoing behaviour and
    motivates the individual to attempt to stop the
    pain (Melzack and Wall, 1988)
  • Whatever the person experiencing it says it is,
    existing whenever the experiencing person says it
    does (McCaffery and Thorpe, 1988).
  • It is an unpleasant sensory and emotional
    experience associated with actual or potential
    tissue damage, or described in terms of such
    damage (Merskey, 1996).

4
Terminologies in pain research
  • Acute pain is a useful biological response
    provoked by injury or disease, which is of
    limited duration (IASP, 1992).
  • Chronic pain is described as pain persisting for
    six months or more and tends not to respond to
    pharmacological treatment.
  • Malignant is associated with progressive illness
    (e.g. cancer)
  • Benign is not associated with progressive illness
    (e.g. lower back pain)
  • Progressive means becoming worse overtime (e.g.
    arthritis)
  • Intractable means resistant to treatment (e.g.
    lower back pain)
  • Intermittent is pain that fluctuates over time
    and in intensity (e.g. fibromyalgia)
  • Recurrent is acute pain occurring periodically
    (e.g. migraine)
  • Organic involves observable tissue damage (e.g.
    arthritis)
  • Psychogenic means absence of demonstrable
    pathology (e.g. fibromyalgia)
  • Referred is pain originating in one body area
    which is perceived as originating from another
    (e.g. perceiving an earache that in fact
    originates from a bad tooth).

5
Components of Pain
6
The Cost of Pain
  • Pain inflicts significant costs on individuals,
    their families, the health services and society
    in general.
  • The economic costs are very high due to extended
    hospital stays, lost working days and increased
    take-up of benefits.
  • The cost of pain in terms of human suffering is
    also high.
  • It is often the most distressing and debilitating
    aspect of chronic illness.
  • Its effects on quality of life can be devastating
    to the individual and their significant others.
  • The emotional toll of severe chronic pain should
    not be underestimated
  • It is estimated that around 50 of severe
    chronic pain patients
  • consider suicide.

7
THEORIES OF PAIN
  • In this lecture, we will consider three theories
    of pain
  • Specificity Theory
  • Pattern Theory
  • Gate Control Theory

8
Specificity Theory (Von Frey, 1894)
  • This theory describes a direct causal
    relationship between pain stimulus and pain
    experience.
  • Stimulation of specific pain receptors
    (nociceptors) throughout the body, sends impulses
    along specific pain pathways (A-delta fibres and
    C-fibres) through the spinal cord to specific
    areas of the sensory cortex of the brain.
  • Stimulus intensity correlates with pain
    intensity higher stimulus intensity and pain
    pathway activation resulting in a more intense
    pain experience.
  • Failure to identify a specific cortical location
    for pain, realisation that pain fibres do not
    respond exclusively to pain but also to pressure
    and temperature, and the disproportional
    relationship between stimulus intensity and
    reported pain intensity.

BRAIN
Spinal cord
NOCICEPTORS
9
Pattern Theory
  • Pattern theorists proposed stimulation of
    nociceptors produces a pattern of impulses that
    are summated in the dorsal horn of the spinal
    cord.
  • Only if the level of the summated output exceeds
    a certain threshold is pain information
    transmitted onwards to the cortex resulting in
    pain perception.
  • Evidence of deferred pain perception raised
    questions concerning the comprehensiveness of
    pattern theories
  • Soldiers not perceiving pain until the battle is
    over
  • Phantom limb
  • Injury without pain perception
  • There was growing evidence for a mediating role
    for psychosocial factors in the experience of
    pain, including cross-cultural differences in
    pain perception and expression.

10
Gate Control Theory
Melzack Wall (1982)
11
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF PAIN
  • Many psychosocial factors have been investigated
    in relation to pain and these appear to exert
    independent effects on the experience of pain.
  • In this lecture, we will discuss eight of these
    factors
  • Cognitions
  • Self-efficacy
  • Perceived control
  • Prior experience and conditioning
  • Secondary gains
  • Personality
  • Mood
  • Stress

12
Cognitions
  • Cognitions influence the experience of pain,
    particularly the appraisal of situations for
    their significance and meaning.
  • Aspects of cognition that have received attention
    related to pain are
  • Attention
  • Increased attention to pain has been associated
    with increased pain perception. This may explain
    why distraction techniques are useful in
    combating pain.
  • Dysfunctional thinking
  • Dysfunctional thoughts, attitudes and beliefs
    about pain are automatic patterns of thinking
    that block the attainment of an individuals
    goals.
  • Coping styles
  • These are strategies an individual uses to
    attempt to deal with their pain. In general,
    active coping styles (e.g. keeping oneself busy)
    have been found to be associated with improved
    coping, reduced pain intensity and improved
    recovery rates.

13
Self-efficacy
  • Self-efficacy beliefs refers to an individuals
    beliefs about how well they can handle a given
    situation (Bandura, 1977).
  • There is a relationship between an individuals
    self-efficacy beliefs and about their ability to
    manage pain (Brekke et al., 2003).
  • Selfefficacy beliefs may also relate to a second
    cognitive component that has been associated with
    pain - perceived control.

14
Perceived control
  • Bowers (1968) showed that individuals endure more
    pain when they control the pain-stimulus on/off
    switch than when it is controlled by someone
    else.
  • This concept relates to the development of
    patient controlled analgesia (PCA), in the
    management of post-operative pain and in
    palliative care.
  • PCA resulted in patients administering less
    analgesic morphine than when it was controlled
    and administered by nurses or through continuous
    infusion.
  • PCA appears to result in better pain management,
    less opiate use and earlier discharge from
    hospital than intramuscular therapy (Royal
    College of Surgeons Anaesthetists, 1990).

15
Previous Experience and Conditioning
  • Both classical and operant conditioning have been
    implicated in the aetiology of chronic pain via
    the association of behaviour and pain.
  • In classical conditioning theory a particular
    situation or environment may become associated
    with pain and therefore provoke increased anxiety
    and pain perception.
  • In operant conditioning theory, pain behaviours
    become conditioned responses through positive
    (e.g. attention, medication, time off work) and
    negative (e.g. disapproval
  • of others, loss of earnings) reinforcements.

16
Secondary Gains
  • Secondary gain relates to social rewards accruing
    from the demonstration of pain behaviours.
  • These secondary gains are thought to reinforce
    pain behaviours and thus maintain the condition.
  • However, this may actually reflect that those in
    receipt of compensation can allow themselves
    appropriate time to recover and says nothing
    about the quality of life of those who returned
    to work earlier.
  • For many individuals, pain results in the loss of
    jobs, social contact, leisure activities, valued
    identities, reduced incomes and concomitant
    reduced standard of living.
  • Such losses are very real and distressing and are
    often associated with substantial hardships,
    lowered mood and loss of self-esteem, unlikely to
    be outweighed by incidental benefits.

Time off work
Financial benefits
Receiving attention
17
Personality
  • It has been suggested that there is a pain-prone
    personality (Engel, 1959)
  • Features of the pain prone personality include
    continual episodes of varying chronic pain, high
    neurotic symptoms (guilt feelings, anxiety,
    depression and hypochondria)
  • Generally, empirical support for the pain-prone
    personality has not been forthcoming and it has
    been suggested that the higher scores for
    particular personality factors (i.e. neurotic
    triad) may be a consequence rather than a cause
    of long-term pain.

18
Mood
  • There is a relationship between pain and anxiety
  • Acute pain increases anxiety. But once pain is
    decreased through treatment, the anxiety also
    decreases, which can cause further decreases in
    the pain, a cycle of pain reduction.
  • Chronic pain remains unalleviated by treatment
    and therefore anxiety increases which can further
    increase the pain, creating a cycle of pain
    increase.
  • Depression is also commonly associated with pain.
  • People who experience severe and persistent pain
    often have feelings of hopelessness,
    helplessness and despair.
  • While correlations between mood states and pain
    have been found, the causal direction and the
    nature of the relationships remains unclear.

19
Stress
  • Chronic pain both exacerbates and is exacerbated
    by stress.
  • Experiencing persistent high levels of pain can
    itself can be a substantial stressor, possibly
    even the most significant stressor in the lives
    of many individuals.
  • It is also often the source of additional life
    stresses, like loss of employment, relationship
    difficulties and financial hardship.
  • Individual, stereotypical physiological responses
    to stress (e.g. clenching jaws, migraine
    headaches) can be a direct source of pain and the
    physiological arousal associated with stress may
    lead to increased pain and inhibit effective
    adaptation.
  • Stress is such a frequent concomitant of pain
    that stress management techniques are routinely
    included as an integral part of pain management
    programmes.

20
SOCIOCULTURAL INFLUENCES ON PAIN
  • Several sociocultural factors have also been
    implicated in the experience of pain.
  • Today, we will discuss the role of
  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Significant others and the family

21
Culture
  • Pain experience is expressed differently across
    cultural groups.
  • Social learning influences pain tolerance levels,
    communication about pain, pain behaviours and the
    meaning of pain.
  • Cultural influences may encourage avoidance or
    acceptance of pain, demonstrable pain behaviours
    or stoic concealment.
  • It may also affect the treatment received within
    healthcare systems in terms of cultural
    expectations and communication traditions.
  • Further research is needed on the influence of
    social factors and discrimination on the
    experience of pain treatment for minority groups.

22
Gender
  • There is much evidence to suggests that women are
    better at dealing with pain than men.
  • Biology, sex hormones, culture, socialization and
    role expectations, psychology, and past
    experience have been offered as explanatory
    variables.
  • However, the relationship between pain and gender
    is complex.
  • The particular type of pain, when it occurs, and
    the researchers gender are all implicated in
    pain reporting.
  • Skevington (1995) argues gender differences may
    have been overemphasized and significant
    similarities exist between the sexes regarding
    pain experiences and actual differences may
    relate to treatment behaviour and pain severity.
  • Further research is needed to unpack the
    relationship between gender and pain.

23
Age
  • The experience of pain has been found to vary
    across the lifespan.
  • Less is known about pain in children than in
    adults.
  • Chronic pain in children appears to be under
    represented in the pain literature, despite the
    reporting of both persistent and recurring
    chronic pain by children.
  • For older adults, pain may be a pervasive aspect
    of their lives differing qualitatively from that
    experienced by younger age groups.
  • The elderly are also consistently
    under-represented in the pain literature and pain
    in this group is substantially under-diagnosed
    and under-treated.
  • Health psychologists should work to improve
    diagnostic techniques and understanding of the
    pain across the lifespan, especially among
    children, older adults and the way it interacts
    with other aspects of their lives.

24
Significant others and the family
  • A common concept in chronic pain research is that
    subjective pain and pain related behaviour may be
    affected by significant others who are perhaps
    one of the major reinforcers for pain-related
    behaviours and chronicity.
  • Spousal solicitousness may inadvertently maintain
    or increase the experience of pain and
    disability.
  • Parents are the most significant influence on a
    childs pain perception, modeling behaviours as
    well as reinforcing them.
  • Pain within the family is likely to affect all
    family members and the family will affect how
    they all cope.
  • Further research is required with measurement
    instruments specifically developed to assess the
    relevant variables in pain populations need to be
    extended to include families and significant
    others.

25
ASSESSMENT
  • Assessment of pain is difficult and various
    techniques are used singly or in combination.
  • These can be grouped under one of four
    categories
  • Physiological measures
  • e.g. medical examination, EMG, heart rate,
    galvanic skin response, etc.
  • Pain questionnaires
  • e.g. McGill Pain questionnaire
  • Mood assessment questionnaires
  • e.g. Becks depression inventory, HADS, etc.
  • Observations
  • Direct observation
  • Self-observation

26
Issues in assessment
  • Many assessment instruments are insensitive to
    age, disability and culture.
  • For example, for groups who have communication
    difficulties, assessment may rely on the reports
    of significant others (e.g. carer, interpreter)
    rather than the individual.
  • Research that focuses on pain assessment among
    under represented groups is needed.
  • Similarly, more work is required to address
    issues around the impact of situational context
    and assessor characteristics on the assessment
    process.
  • Further investigation is needed of the influence
    of assessment, including the impact of
    compensation claim assessments and of the need to
    prove the existence of pain and how it restricts
    the sufferers daily activities.

27
MANAGEMENT
  • In this section, we will discuss several
    strategies in the management of pain
  • Behavioural strategies
  • Cognitive strategies
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
  • Pharmacological strategies
  • Physical strategies
  • Other strategies and approaches
  • Palliative care
  • Multidisciplinary Pain Management
    Centres/Programmes

28
Behavioural strategies
  • Most behavioural strategies are based upon
    operant learning processes.
  • Conditioning was integral to contingency
    management.
  • This was a 2-6 week inpatient program during
    which nursing staff would ignore medication
    requests, reinforce targeted well behaviours,
    introduce increasing exercise quotas, and employ
    a fixed-schedule pain cocktail.
  • The pain cocktail delivered medication within a
    strong tasting masking fluid that allowed
    medication dosages to be reduced without the
    patient noticing.
  • While such programs have had good (even dramatic)
    short-term results, they have been less
    successful in maintaining such gains, possibly
    due to non-generalisation outside the hospital
    environment.
  • It is rare for programmes today to focus solely
    on conditioning methods.

29
Behavioural Strategies
  • Other behaviorual strategies are discussed below
  • Graded exercise strategies involve setting a
    starting level of activity that the person can
    manage and then developing a schedule to
    gradually increase the length of time and
    intensity of the exercise.
  • Biofeedback and autogenic training teach the
    individual to control aspects of their
    physiology. The individual receives continuous
    feedback through visual and audio signals from a
    machine that monitors their physiology, through
    which they learn to control their response.
  • Relaxation probably affects pain perception both
    directly and indirectly, through its positive
    effects on stress and anxiety. This may involve
    progressive muscle relaxation or more simply deep
    rhythmic breathing. This is often used in
    conjunction with meditation or imagery
    techniques.

30
Cognitive strategies
  • Cognitive strategies aim to help the individual
    identify and understand their cognitions and
    their connection with their experience of pain
    and then change negative cognitions to improve
    it.
  • This includes teaching individuals to identify
    and challenge distorted thinking -
  • Cognitive restructuring
  • an active coping technique that promotes the
  • internal attribution of positive changes.

31
Cognitive strategies
  • Training in cognitive coping skills has generally
    been found to be beneficial to pain patients.
  • Distraction and positive self-talk are just two
    examples from the repertoire of coping skills.
  • Imagery involves forming and maintaining a
    pleasant, calming or coping image in the mind. In
    guided imagery attention is guided away from an
    undesirable sensation or mood (e.g. pain) by
    another person who verbally describes the image
    while the patient relaxes.
  • Meditation also frequently forms part of
    relaxation training and involves the individual
    focusing their attention on a simple stimulus, to
    the exclusion of all other stimuli.

32
Cognitive strategies
  • Information provision has been shown to reduce
    pain reports and intensity, possibly by
    alleviating the fear and anxiety of not knowing
    what to expect for acute and postoperative pain
    (Williams et al., 2004).
  • The widespread interest in self-help literature,
    internet information and support groups may be
    indicative of the desire of people in pain to
    understand their experience, what to expect and
    potential treatment options.

33
Cognitive behavioural therapy
  • Cognitive behavioural therapy utilises the full
    range of cognitive and behavioural techniques
    already described in individualised programmes
    that emphasise relapse prevention strategies.
  • Stress management training is often included due
    to the significant levels of stress implicated in
    the generation and exacerbation of pain.
  • The literature on CBT and pain suggests it shows
    considerable promise as an effective treatment
    for pain in adults (Eccleston, et al., 2002).

34
Pharmacological strategies
  • Various analgesics and anaesthetics are
    prescribed for the treatment of pain.
  • Anaesthetics are used to numb the sensation of
    pain.
  • However, the associated perceived high risk of
    addiction has resulted in their use being
    restricted.
  • Non-opioid analgesics, non-steroidal
    anti-inflamatory drugs (NSAIDs) and drugs that
    control pain indirectly (e.g. antidepressants,
    sedatives) are also commonly used.
  • Another aspect relating to drugs is the placebo
    effect.
  • In addition to prescribed drug treatments many
    individuals self-medicate with recreational drugs
    like alcohol and cannabis to alleviate their
    pain.
  • However, the informal use of cannabis for pain
    control and its interaction with other pain
    control strategies needs further investigation.

35
Physical strategies
  • Surgical control of pain mainly involved cutting
    the pain fibres to stop pain signal transmission.
  • However, it provided only short-term results and
    the risks associated with surgery mean it is no
    longer viewed as a viable treatment option
    (Melzack Wall, 1982).
  • Physiotherapy may be used to increase mobility
    and correct maladjusted posture, encourage
    exercise and movement and education.
  • Other physical strategies include the stimulation
    of nerves under the skin (i.e. transcutaneous
    electrical nerve stimulation/ TENS treatment),
    massage, spinal cord stimulation, etc.

36
Other strategies and approaches
  • There are many other strategies and alternative
    therapies that individuals use in their efforts
    to deal with their pain.
  • Acupuncture has been around for centuries and
    while the mechanisms by which it produces
    beneficial effects are not well understood it
    does appear to exert substantial analgesic
    effects (WHO, 2003).
  • There is substantial, reliable evidence that
    hypnosis has beneficial effects for the treatment
    of acute (e.g. childbirth) and chronic pain (e.g.
    cancer-related) conditions.
  • Individuals frequently use complementary or
    alternative therapies (e.g. aromatherapy, Chinese
    medicine) to combat pain and there is growing
    support that they help chronic pain control (e.g.
    NIH, 1997).
  • The widespread use of alternative strategies may
    reflect dissatisfaction with mainstream
    approaches.
  • It is important that such strategies are
    evaluated independently and in conjunction with
    traditional approaches

37
Palliative care
  • Palliative care refers to the alleviation of
    symptoms of illness when there is no cure
    available, particularly concerning terminal
    illness.
  • Its aims are to reduce suffering, fear and
    distress, normalise the dying process, maintain
    active participation in life, increase quality of
    life and maintain dignity until death for the
    patient.
  • Terminally ill patients are often asked to take
    part in drug trials, even without any expectation
    of the drugs helping them.
  • Despite this, effective pain management underpins
    palliative care, including medication, CBT and
    alternative therapies.

38
Multidisciplinary Pain Management Centres
  • Pain management programmes today tend to be run
    on an outpatient basis in specialist pain
    management centres.
  • Multidisciplinary teams may include doctors,
    nurses, physiotherapists, psychologists,
    psychiatrists, occupational therapists and
    counsellors.
  • Individual programmes are developed that aim to
    improve the individuals quality of life by
    reducing pain, increasing activity and coping,
    restoring function, promoting self-efficacy and
    self-management.
  • The patient receives a full assessment,
    education, skills training, exercise schedules,
    relapse prevention and family work.
  • Multidisciplinary rehabilitation programmes
    represent the most comprehensive approach to
    date, by targeting the individuals specific pain
    experience and tailoring appropriate treatment
    combinations.

39
Treatment issues
  • Pain management can be a particularly
    controversial issue.
  • Evidence suggests that in many circumstances pain
    is under-treated due to (Greenwald et al., 1999)
  • Inadequate assessment
  • Focus on underlying pathologies
  • Negative stereotypes and erroneous assumptions
    about certain population groups
  • Addiction fears
  • The inappropriateness of non-pharmacological
    treatments
  • Patients inability to verbalise pain information
    or requests for medication
  • It has also been shown that many prejudices and
    misconceptions operate in the treatment of pain
    patients, with various populations being under
    treated for pain (Todd et al., 2000)
  • Children, people with communication difficulties
    and the elderly

40
Treatment issues
  • Pain is sometimes deemed to be psychogenic,
    resulting from emotional, motivational or
    personality problems.
  • However, the distinction between organic and
    psychogenic pain may have little practical value.
  • While psychogenic pain may represent a convenient
    label for cases where underlying pathology has
    not been found, it has a tendency to inherently
    ascribe the problem to the patient and thus
    promote prejudice and injustice.
  • Health psychologists must endeavour to promote
    the sensitive and respectful treatment of
    individuals reporting pain, both within the
    discipline and externally, in terms of research,
    intervention development, and treatment.

41
Summary
  • Early pain theories proposed that pain was a
    sensation that involved a direct line of
    transmission from the pain stimulus to the brain.
  • However, the growing body of evidence for the
    psychological mediation of pain saw the
    development of the multidimensional gate control
    theory, which acknowledged psychosocial
    influences.
  • Many psychological variables that influence the
    pain experience have been examined including
    cognitions, self-efficacy, perceived control,
    prior experience, conditioning, secondary gains,
    personality, mood and stress.
  • Similarly sociocultural factors such as culture,
    gender, age, the role of significant others and
    the family have been implicated.
  • Particular groups appear to be under represented
    in the pain literature including ethnic
    minorities, children, the elderly, some disabled
    people and people with certain medical conditions.

42
Summary (continued)
  • Assessment of pain is difficult and various
    techniques are used singly or in combination
    (e.g. medical examinations, observations,
    questionnaires, diaries and logs, and
    interviews).
  • A wide variety of pain management strategies
    exist. Currently, the most successful approach
    appears to be programmes that combine cognitive
    behaviour therapies and traditional medical
    therapies.
  • The assessment and treatment of pain,
    particularly chronic pain, can be influenced by
    misconceptions about specific patient groups
    including ethnic minorities, children, the
    elderly, some disabled people, and people with
    certain medical conditions (e.g. sickle cell
    disease sufferers assumed to be drug users).
  • The body of research suggests that pain is a
    complex and multidimensional phenomenon that
    includes biological, psychological and
    behavioural components.
  • Health psychologists can make a significant
    contribution in promoting sensitive and
    respectful research and treatment for people
    experiencing long standing painful conditions.
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