True compassion means not only feeling another's pain but also being moved to help relieve it...(Daniel Goleman)

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Overview of a Pain Clinic


 Chronic pain is often defined as a pain that lasts for more than 3 months. It is often considered a disease of the brain. Patients of chronic pain present with a constellation of signs and symptoms with often and ill-defined pathophysiology. It usually consists of a heterogeneous group of patient population suffering from various kind of central nervous system disorder. The disease may lead to a complex presentation involving sensory, emotional, cognitive, modulatory and autonomic changes.

Managing such a patient and pain clinic requires an overall care of the patient’s constant pain in question, focusing on successful control of pain (acute on chronic and chronic) along with consideration of the distressful symptoms of the disease, prevention of side effects and therapeutic modalities while keeping the patient comfortable.

Pain management is thus an interdisciplinary subject requiring health care members working as a team. Each member contributes a unique blend of knowledge and clinical practice in the care of patient. Effective pain control results in decreased morbidity and mortality as well as an improved patient satisfaction with healthcare.

Apart from the disease process itself that initiated the pain, chronic pain is influenced by a combination of genetics, stress, behavioural, cultural and emotional factors. A persistent pain of long duration can cause changes in the nervous system thus making the pain a distinct chronic disease by itself. It can then lead to certain other symptoms like depression, anxiety as well as decreased physical activity.

Management of a chronic pain patient should start at Primary health care level. Primary health care forms the first point of contact of an individual with the healthcare system. The need of the hour is to train the staff, to make them better educated in understanding pain and its various causes and to collaborate with pain specialists in case of persistence of pain despite treatment.

Setting up a pain clinic
Bonica has been credited with the development of modern multidisciplinary pain clinic. He was an anaesthetist working at an army Hospital in the USA following World War II and is considered as father of modern pain management. He observed that patients with causalgia responded well to nerve blocks whereas, others with more chronic pain problems did not. Bonica discussed about his patients with other specialists in related fields to arrive at a diagnosis and a treatment plan was charted out thus, making his efforts a multidisciplinary approach which was later found to be more effective and efficient.

Pain clinic
Pain clinic is usually an OPD based service where patients with pain who are not incapacitated and do not need continuous assessment on a daily basis are seen. The basic aim here is to treat the patient’s pain and not the underlying disease. Therefore a thorough evaluation from various specialities is a prerequisite before referral to a pain clinic.

there are different types of pain clinics like single modalities clinic using ‘nerve block’; acupuncture; electrical nerve stimulation; physiotherapy’ counselling etc. In this case specialists from a single stream man the clinic.

Pain clinic can be syndrome oriented like ‘low back pain’ or ‘headache’ clinic.

Multidisciplinary pain clinics treat various pain syndromes when they present. They often have facility for keeping a patient admitted for a procedure. They play a more active role in patient management as compared to procedure based clinics.

A pain Clinic can function on its own or it may be a part of a larger Institution like a Medical College or a Hospital.

Members of the pain management team
Being an interdisciplinary subject professionals from various streams are part of the team which include anaesthesiologist, rheumatologist, physiatrist, orthopedician, neurologist, neurosurgeon and psychiatrist. The team should be headed by a team leader.
An anaesthesiologist is in a unique position to coordinate with other specialities. The ability and skill to interact with members of the team, expertise in the technical skill to administer sedation and pain relief propels him to be a leader. In practice the success of continuing the program is usually based on anaesthesiologist and psychiatrist whereas other medical specialists contribute as required.

Auditing
It is mandatory to audit the efficacy of the service frequently depending on the policy of the institution. It can be used as a tool for learning in addition to improving the quality of service.

Some chronic conditions presenting to the pain clinic
Non malignant
     Acute herpes zoster
     Post herpetic neuralgia
     CRPS 1 and 2
     Sympathetic mediated pain
     Diabetic neuropathy
     Phantom pain
     Vasomotor rhinitis
     Myofascial pain syndrome
     Fibromyalgia
     Low back pain
     Failed back syndrome
     Headache
     Lumbago
     Frozen shoulder
     Plantar fasciitis
     Urogenital pain
     Chronic pelvic pain
     Post-surgical pain

Malignant pain
     Cancer pain with or without bony secondaries
     Terminally ill cancer patients
     AIDS patient