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Stress and Disease Dr. Donald B. Giddon Harvard University, Fall 2013 Pain 1

Stress and Disease Dr. Donald B. Giddon Harvard University, Fall 2013

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Stress and Disease Dr. Donald B. Giddon Harvard University, Fall 2013. Pain. Pain. As response to stress affecting particular organ system (QIII) Illness response to disease (Question IV). Dimensions of pain experience. Sensory-discriminative Rapidly conducting spinal systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Stress and Disease Dr. Donald B. Giddon

Harvard University, Fall 2013

Pain

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Page 2: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Pain

• As response to stress affecting particular organ system (QIII)

• Illness response to disease (Question IV)

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Page 3: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Dimensions of pain experience• Sensory-discriminative

– Rapidly conducting spinal systems

• Motivational-affective- – Unpleasant experiences that motivate person to avoid those

situations

– Influenced by reticular and limbic structures

• Cognitive- evaluative- – Related to pain input

– Compare to past experiences

• Mediated by neocortex and higher CNS processes• Behavioral responses to pain

− Behaviors to reduce the source of pain as quickly as possible

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Page 4: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Cognitive Processes

Sensory Awareness Emotional and Motivational Reactions

Experience of “Pain”

Spinal “gate” mechanisms

affect and are affected by all of the components

above

Sensory nerve impulses from receptors (e.g. free nerve endings) 4

Page 5: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Pain/Causal Factors

Biological –

*Stimulation of pain receptors in body

*Release of substance P, endorphins, other neurotransmitters affecting brain regions involved in pain perception

*Opening and closing of spinal “gates”

Cognitive -

*Perceived meaning: of pain stimuli

*Placebo effects

- Attitudes and beliefs

*Use of cognitive – behavioral pain control strategies

*Perceived self-efficacy

Intrapsychic –

*Unresolved conflicts in somatoform pain disorders

*Pain as a means of controlling others

- Secondary gain

*Personality conflicts

*Meaning or significance of pain (Beecher) 5

Page 6: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Pain/Causal Factors

External

Environmental -

*Cultural factors influencing perceived meaning of pain stimuli

*Previous learning

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Page 8: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Three Thresholds in Response to Physical Stimulation

Biological: “I feel something”

Biological: “I feel pain”

Psychosocial: “I can’t tolerate any more, e.g., suffering

ForceHeatCold

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ACUTE PAIN

•Normal physiological response to adverse chemical, thermal or mechanical stimulus or injury.

•Short duration (minutes, hours, days)

•Psychological component: Anxiety in proportion to perceived significance of injury.

Page 11: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

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CHRONIC PAIN

•Except for intractable medical conditions, e.g. cancer, source of pain not easily identified

•Long duration (weeks, months, years)

•Psychological comorbidity−Depression −Occasional agitation

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CLINICAL PAIN

•With or without external provocation, individual reports feeling pain

•Psychological component: − Anxiety or depression

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IATROGENIC PAIN

•Induced in a patient by a physician's activity, manner, or therapy

•Associated with anticipation of current treatment and its consequences

−Fear of pain

•Psychological component: −Anxiety−Reduced by patient control

Page 14: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

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PATHOGENIC PAIN

•Associated with disease, dysfunction, or a trauma prior to beginning of treatment.

•Psychological component: −Anxiety or depression, Depending upon location or significance of body part.

Page 15: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

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LABORATORY PAIN

•Operationally defined by responses to manipulated noxious stimulus

•Psychological component: −Anxiety−Can distinguish among sensation, pain, and suffering thresholds

Page 16: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

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PSYCHOGENIC PAIN•Regardless of source and objective measures,

−Pain is real to the patient.

•Defined as physical pain that is caused, increased, or prolonged by mental, emotional, or behavioral factors

• There are no discernible pathological conditions consistent with patient’s pain report.

− 50/50 low back pain example

•Difficult to distinguish from hypochondriasis − Defined as undue preoccupation with the body and its processes

•Psychological component: −Anxiety or depression depending on duration

Page 17: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Why is measurement of pain important?Why is measurement of pain important?

• Clinical vs. Laboratory Pain• To determine pain intensity, quality, duration• To aid in diagnosis• To help decide on choice of therapy• To relate to biological, physical and psychosocial

variables• To evaluate relative effectiveness of different therapies• Limitations: pain rarely has one-to-one relationship to

stimulus– Psychological factors and influences by fear, anxiety– Cultural backgrounds, and meaning of situation to person

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Page 18: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Pain AssessmentPain Assessment

SubjectiveSubjective1. Visual analog scale (VAS)2. Verbal rating scale- mild, moderate, severe3. Numerical rating scales- 1-1004. McGill pain questionnaire (MPQ)5. Descriptor differential scale

• Self-report

ObjectiveObjective• Behavioral approaches

– Clinical (passive)• Reporting

– Experimental (active)• Psychophysiological• Eliciting

• Neurophysiological– fMRI

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Page 19: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

McGill Pain Questionnaire• Most widely tested and used pain instrument• Developed by Melzack and Torgerson in 1971 to

specify qualities of pain• 102 adjectives are classified into three categories:

sensory qualities, affective qualities, evaluative qualities• Five words are used to express pain intensity: 1=mild,

2=discomforting, 3=distressing, 4=horrible, 5=excruciating

• Descriptor-lists read to patient with instructions to choose only those words which describe how they are feeling right now

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Page 22: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Orofacial Pain

- Disproportionate- same needle elsewhere evokes less response- identify other sensation as pain- homunculus (see next slide)- significance for survival

- face/milk, needle/rape- emotional support and contact - sucking- teeth as weapon

- teething one of first pain experiences c.f. circumcision- has lasting effect

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REFERRED PAIN

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Cultural Differences

• Tursky

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Page 26: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Six-month pain prevalence based on the anatomical site and race. For comparison, results from Six-month pain prevalence based on the anatomical site and race. For comparison, results from Von Korff et al.’s (1988) study of a smaller Caucasian group are also presented.Von Korff et al.’s (1988) study of a smaller Caucasian group are also presented.

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Page 27: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

7 0 7 0 doctor rates paindoctor rates pain 6 06 0 higher than patient higher than patient 5 0000 5 0000 4 00000000 4 00000000 3 000000000000000 3 000000000000000 2 000000000000000000000 2 000000000000000000000 1 00000000000000000000000 1 00000000000000000000000 0 00000000000000000000000 0 00000000000000000000000 same ratingsame rating - 1 0000000000000000000000 - 1 0000000000000000000000 - 2 0000000000 - 2 0000000000 - 3 000000 - 3 000000 - 4 000 - 4 000 - 5 0- 5 0 doctor rates pain doctor rates pain - 6 00 - 6 00 lower than patient lower than patient

RESULTSRESULTSDoctor’s pain rating minus patient’s pain rating, post-encounterDoctor’s pain rating minus patient’s pain rating, post-encounter

30% of ratings differed by 3+ points. 30% of ratings differed by 3+ points. 27

Doctor vs. Patient Pain Rating

Page 28: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

The “pain-prone” personality:

“By virtue of providing for others and not being able to fully depend on their own parents as children they had postponed gratification of such needs until a minor injury provided a rational and socially acceptable means of depending on others for emotional and economic support.”

-- Gentry (1974)

Catastrophizing is associated with negative cognitive and affective and related psychopathological responses to pain which include feelings of helplessness, pessimism, magnification, and rumination (Edwards, Calahan et al. 2011). 

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Page 29: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Other “pain-prone” models:

Alexithymia and somatization-- Stephanos (1979)

Pain-prone characteristics• Somatic complaints• “Solid citizen” presentation• Depression• History of abuse or models of invalidation

- Blurner and Heilbronn (1932)

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Page 30: Stress and Disease  Dr. Donald B. Giddon  Harvard University, Fall 2013

Conscious and unconscious origins:

Disorder Symptom Production Motivation

Malingering con conSomatoform ucs ucsHypochondriacal ucs ucsMὕnchausen’s syndrome con (ucs) con (ucs)Mὕnchausen’s by proxy con (ucs) con (ucs)

- from Eisendrath, S.J. Psychiatric aspects of chronic pain

Neurology 45:26-34, 1995.30

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