Chronic Pain & management Flashcards
Definition of chronic pain
Pain which persists beyond the healing phase, which may be due to progressive or sustained tissue damage but may also be due to a mechanism within the nervous system itself –> can also arise from purely psychological causes
Classification of analgesics
Non-narcotic –> act peripherally – COX inhibitors
Narcotic –> CNS – opiates
Adjuvant –> modify underlying cause, or modify perception of pain
Adjuvant analgesics include
amitriptylines, carbamazepine, gabapentin
Opioids used in chronic pain (6)
Morphine, oxycontin, fentanyl, buprinorphine, meptazinol, methadone
Concerns about long term opioid use (5,5)
Common – sedation, nausea, vomiting, constipation, urinary retention
Emerging –Immune dysfunction, endocrine deficiency, sleep disorders, hyperalgesia, race/sex/age variability
Indications for using opiates in chronic pain (5)
The pain is a major impediment to recovery and psychological issues are not a major concern
Other drugs have failed
No history of substance abuse
Will always require monitoring
Tricyclic antidepressants as adjuvant analgesics
Block 5HT & NA reuptake
Rapidly absorbed and bound to albumin, metabolised in liver and have a long half life
SEs–> anticholinergic, CNS depression/agitation, CVS effects (cardiotoxicity, hypotension)
How do antidepressants work as adjuvant analgesics?
Stimulate the descending inhibitory pain pathway
Work in non-depressed patients
Amitripyline is best
Anticonvulsants which are used as adjuvant analgesics
Carbamazepine, sodium valproate, lamotrigine, gabapentin, clonazepam, topiramide, pregabalin
Injections for chronic pain
Diagnostic – LA to clarify mechanism or simulate effect
Therapeutic – temporary (LA) or permanent (lytic agent) injections to disable a pathway or reduce inflammation (corticosteroids)
Both – sympathetic block or trigger-point injection
Trigger point injections
A taut band of muscle with a tender point – pain is reproduced by stretch and pressure –> pain by a referred to another point
Can use just a needle, LA, LA+glucocorticoid, or botox
Peripheral nerve injections
For spontaneous entrapment syndromes (ilioinguinal, lateral femoral, greater occipital) or post-traumatic neuroma –> inject LA+glucocorticoids
Paravertebral nerve root injection
Used in cases of disc disease or foraminal stenosis
Deposit LA+glucocorticoid and use CT/fluoroscopy to validate
Selective lumbar nerve root block
Inject around a lumbar nerve root to block transmission of pain
Epidural injection
Allows for symptomatic relief in disc protursion with radiculopathy, spinal stenosis, pain from vertebral #,
Can help rehabilitation or to avoid surgery