What Does Intractable Pain Really Mean?
/By Forest Tennant, PNN Columnist
Many people have chronic pain. If you are over age 60, you probably have some bothersome pain from arthritis, bunions, carpal tunnel, TMJ or a neuropathy. These common conditions cause intermittent pain which may be quite bothersome.
There are some unfortunate persons, however, who have terrible, grueling pain that just won’t go away. It’s there 24/7. It’s the kind that keeps you awake and makes you feel so sick you can’t read, think or socialize, and it will force you to take cover on the couch or in bed.
The pain can be primarily located anywhere on the body such as the hip, neck or back. But when it flares you feel it “all over” and it is intense.
This constant pain means you have a primary or underlying disease or injury that has emitted and sent so much electricity to the central nervous system (CNS) that inflammation forms inside the brain or spinal cord. The brain chemicals and neurotransmitter-receptor systems (NTRS) that normally control and shut down pain become damaged and impaired. The chemicals your own body makes for pain control, as well as pain medications, stop working correctly because of the damage to these chemical-tissue receiving sites.
Constant pain means you need a program or protocol to treat your basic injury or disease. One that reduces electric impulses and helps rebuild the damage to the NTRS in your spinal cord and brain. Symptomatic pain relievers are usually a must, but they don’t treat or reverse your basic problem.
Intractable Pain Syndrome
Due to new research, we now call the constant pain condition the Intractable Pain Syndrome (IPS). It’s called a “syndrome” because of the many manifestations of the condition.
IPS is a complication of a disease or injury. To obtain some relief and recovery, every person with IPS must know the name of the disease or injury that started the pain, and the anatomic location on the body that first sustained pain. Our studies have found that many persons with IPS don’t have a diagnosis for the cause of their pain and may have even forgotten the site on their body where the pain originated.
Common causes of IPS are:
Adhesive Arachnoiditis
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD) or Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)
Advanced Osteoarthritis
Genetic Connective Tissue/Collagen Disorder (Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome)
Traumatic Brain Injury (stroke, trauma)
Autoimmune Disease
There are other rare causes of IPS, including porphyria, sickle cell disease, interstitial cystitis, Lyme disease and rare genetic disorders.
Vague complaints or diagnoses about back pain, headaches, sprains, strains or “pain all over” are not specific enough to get you much relief or recovery and can’t be considered a legitimate cause of IPS. That’s why it is important to know the specific cause of your pain. What was the specific diagnosis that warranted an epidural injection, surgery or an opioid prescription?
Regardless of what caused your IPS or how long you’ve had it, your original pain site is problematic and needs to be identified. The site is generating inflammation and electricity, and could be scarred in a way that blocks the normal flow of electricity through the body.
The major goal of the IPS Research and Education Project is to bring awareness that simple chronic pain and IPS are quite different entities. A second goal is to bring recognition, prevention and treatment of IPS into mainstream medical practice at the community level. IPS must be known, recognized and treated in the ambulatory medical system like any other long-term care problem such as rheumatoid arthritis, emphysema, diabetes, asthma, or schizophrenia.
It must also be done along with physical, psychologic and pharmaceutical measures that are acceptable to all concerned parties and that don’t require high, risky dosages of abusable drugs.
Forest Tennant is retired from clinical practice but continues his groundbreaking research on intractable pain and arachnoiditis. This column is adapted from newsletters recently issued by the IPS Research and Education Project of the Tennant Foundation. Readers interested in subscribing to the newsletter can sign up by clicking here.
The Tennant Foundation has given financial support to Pain News Network and is currently sponsoring PNN’s Patient Resources section.