A New
Unique Chronic Pain Detector
Category:
Medical - Health: Pain Management
The
American Academy of Pain Medicine
(AAPM) defines pain as - "An
unpleasant sensation and emotional
response to that sensation".
The Web
version of the Encyclopedia
Britannica defines pain as - "A
complex experience consisting of a
physiological (bodily) response to a
noxious stimulus followed by an
affective (emotional) response to
that event. Pain is a warning
mechanism that helps to protect an
organism by influencing it to
withdraw from harmful stimuli. It is
primarily associated with injury or
the threat of injury, to bodily
tissues."
Pain is
an individual sensation that can be
described or defined by the person
having it. It may cause distress and
discomfort, it is usually described
as: aching, pinching, throbbing or
stabbing. We may distinguish between
two basic types of pain - acute and
chronic.
Acute
pain lasts a relatively short time.
It is a signal that body tissue is
being injured. The pain generally
disappears when the injury heals.
Acute pain results from disease,
inflammation or tissue injury. It
may appear suddenly, such as after
surgery trauma and may be
accompanied by emotional or anxiety
distress. The cause of acute pain
can usually be diagnosed and treated
accordingly. In certain cases it may
become chronic.
Chronic
pain may range from mild to severe
and lasts usually for long periods
of time, more than three months. It
is associated with the disease
itself. Chronic pain may get worse
by psychological or environmental
factors.
The
cause of chronic pain is not always
evident. In certain cases, it may be
associated with chronic conditions
such as: arthritis, fibromyalgia or
lupus with symptoms such as: swollen
joints, unexplained fever, extreme
fatigue, sleep problems or red skin
rash. Chronic pain syndromes, in
particular, are complex and their
effective treatment often involves
coordinated, multidisciplinary
consultation.
In
contrast to acute pain, chronic pain
can be mysterious, intractable and
is often very expensive to treat.
The complexity of chronic pain stems
from the fact that it is a
bio-psycho-social condition, which
occurs in various forms.
Since
pain is a bio-psycho-social
condition, all aspects of the
condition must be treated. Assuming
that a condition is "all in the
patient's head" makes the mistake of
overlooking possible real pain.
On the
other hand, failure to assess the
psycho-social factor can also lead
to longer recovery. The complex
nature of chronic pain disorders
makes it impossible for a single
professional to treat it
successfully.
We may
distinguish between peripheral and
central pain.
Peripheral pain originates in the
peripheral nerves or in muscles,
usually via trauma.
Central
pain arises from Central Nervous
System (CNS) pathology or
dysfunction. This is primarily due
to structural changes in the CNS,
such as: spinal cord injury,
multiple sclerosis, stroke and
epilepsy.
Inhibition of pain is important and
needed especially when our safety is
more important, like when we are
running away from dangerous
situation. The purpose of pain is to
tell us via our brain when something
needs to be done about a damaged
area. The brain will assist us
whether to pay attention to the
painful area or ignore it.
This
information is transmitted by the
brain and travels to the spinal cord
or brain stem via electrical
impulses in fibers of spinal or
certain cranial nerves. Those
signals pass electrically to higher
CNS levels.
Therefore, monitoring those signals
in real time may be used as
essential parameters in our effort
for detecting and verifying pain.
Pain
and Gender. Recent studies using
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
brain scans of patients during pain
stimuli showed different brain
responses between men and women.
Several
areas of male and female brains
responded differently to the same
pain stimuli. Female's brain showed
more activity in emotion related
centers where males responded in the
cognitive or analytical regions.
Those differences may relate to our
evolution process and the different
social tasks of males and females.
Women
often have high pain experience
levels but lower pain tolerance.
Their sensitivity to pain is
affected by many factors such as
biological, inherited conditions and
hormone levels.
Pain
and Animals. The presence of pain is
by the observation of change from
normal behavior.
Pain
may be evident as a limp or a change
in gait, withdrawal or protection of
an injured part, abnormal postures,
licking, rubbing or scratching at an
area. Signs of pain and distress
particular to rodents include eating
too much, chewing toes and feet.
Signs
of pain may be subtle such as a
change in respiration, reluctance to
move, apprehension, sudden
aggression, inability to rest or
sleep normally, or a worried or
anxious expression.
The new chronic pain detector - the
Neuro-CPD system is built using
multi-channel physiological signal
processing algorithm in real-time to
operate also under ambulatory
conditions.
Neuro-CPD is a complementary tool
for the physician to diagnose
correctly and recommend the
appropriate treatment. It is not
replacing the physician nor is it
performing any direct clinical
assessment. It is reporting
accurately certain vital signs so
that in conjunction with the
physical, psychological effect and
other symptoms of pain the physician
may recommend the right treatment.
Neuro-CPD will revolutionize the
treatment of pain by physicians for
the benefit of all parties involved.
For more information please visit: http://pain.imexco.com