Chapter 22 Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Approaches to Pain Management Flashcards
KEY POINTS 1. Pain management is the first step in restoration of function. Functional improvement is not always synonymous with alleviation of pain. 2. Physical modalities (ultrasound, hot packs, etc.) may be of benefit in acute pain situations. Chronic use of these interventions should be discouraged. 3. Exercise treatment is a helpful adjunct in treating patients with all types of pain disorders. Exercise programs should include flexibility, muscle strengthening, and aerobic exercise. 4.
Therapeutic programs often include
medication and exercise for flexibility, strength, and fitness,
and may use passive modalities, injections, interventional treatments and cognitive and behavioral interventions
Treatment programs for acute pain focus on
addressing the pain generator, using temporary relative rest if indicated, and education for stretching, strengthening, fitness, and proper biomechanics.
Programs for chronic pain
include
exercise regimens, but often require behavioral and
psychological interventions, and direct treatment of the
pain generator itself is rarely effective
Physical therapy
includes therapeutic exercise, functional training in home and work activities, manual therapy, prescription and application of
devices, and passive modalities
goals of pain treatment programs
self-efficacy, return of functional capacity, and
acceptable analgesia
Modalities
methods used by therapists to exchange energy with tissues with the goal of creating a therapeutic response. Modalities are an adjunctive treatment included as part of a rehabilitation program, rarely used in isolation.
Passive modalities may include
the application of heat, cold, sound waves, electricity, and electromagnetic waves to effect changes in tissue structures such as muscle,
fascia, ligament, tendon, capsule, and nerve
Modalities are most useful when treating
acute pain where the specific underlying musculoskeletal abnormalities can be matched with an appropriate intervention. The long-term use of modalities is discouraged, since they may reinforce passive coping behavior
Therapeutic heat transfer occurs by one or a combination of mechanism
radiation, conduction, convection, conversion,
and evaporation.
Radiation
the transfer of heat through
thermal radiation at the surface
Conduction
is heat exchange through direct contact
Convection
is characterized by transfer of thermal energy through movement in a fluid medium, although the therapeutic energy exchange still occurs through conduction
Conversion
occurs when a different type of energy is converted to heat energy
Evaporation
results in loss of heat when a liquid on a surface undergoes a phase transition into a gas
mechanism can be used to transfer heat to structures deeper than several centimeters beneath
the surface.
only conversion. Remaining mechanisms are able to provide only superficial exchange of thermal energy.
Mechanism ways that cold can be applied
Conduction,
convection, and evaporation
Applying heat causes improved
elasticity of soft tissue as well as increased blood flow, metabolic activity, enzymatic activity, oxygen demand, and capillary permeability
Nerve conduction velocity increases with
application of heat.
The heated tissues become
more supple, and there
are increases in healing cells and nutrients and decreases
in metabolic waste
complications of heat
heat can also increase
edema and bleeding
The target temperature for these modalities is generally accepted to be
40° to 45° C, and the thermal pain threshold is normally
about 45° C
Indications for Therapeutic Heat
Muscle spasm, Pain, Contracture, Hematoma resolution, Hyperemia
Increase collagen extensibility
Accelerate metabolic processes
Contraindications for Therapeutic
Heat
Acute inflammation Hemorrhage or bleeding disorders Decreased sensation Poor thermal regulation Malignancy Edema Peripheral vascular disease Ischemia Atrophic skin or scarred skin Inability to respond to pain
Superficial heat
causes the greatest increase in temperature at the surface of the skin, with less heat penetrating to the deep tissues: about 1° C at a depth of 2 to 3 cm.