Chiropractic Care for Chronic Pain
A Chiropractor's Perspective on Pain Management
Broad Pain Categories
As a specialty, pain management deals with two broad categories of pain:
intractable pain, and chronic pain. Intractable pain is
a term first used by the British after WWII as a clinical definition to designate
those soldiers who required morphine for constant pain. It is a useful term
to designate patients who are in excruciating and constant pain of such severity
that it dominates virtually moment of their existence. Chronic pain is
ongoing pain, not usually constant and less severe than intractable pain that
persists beyond an expected time frame for healing and hasn't responded to the
usual means of pain control measures.
Chronic Pain May Affect Daily Activities
I don't treat intractable pain -- which is treated medically with opiate drugs and surgery -- but I do treat chronic pain. The point at which pain has become chronic cannot be precisely defined. It must be diagnosed on a case-by-case basis. Often a patient has had persistent pain for some length of time, or has had reoccurring pain, and has tried a number of different approaches without significant relief. All pain has the potential to become chronic.
Consider a Chiropractor's View
How does a chiropractor, a drugless doctor who specializes in conservative
care, view pain -- especially chronic pain -- and its management? Like my medical
colleagues, when I have a patient in pain, I try my best to alleviate it as
quickly as possible, but there are differences. Let's follow a chronic pain
patient who comes into my office for a sense of how a chiropractor views pain
management.
The Chronic Pain Patient
Mary, has been to a number of different doctors before she comes to see me.
Referred by a friend, she has already seen her primary care physician, an orthopedist,
and a neurologist. She has had a course of physical therapy and been to an acupuncturist.
As a conservative practitioner who does not treat organic disease, I appreciate the patient who has already been to medical specialists who have ruled out an organic cause-such as cancer or infection -- for the patient's pain. Rather, the pain disorder has been considered "functional", a disturbance which is not a progressive disease, but a disturbance of function. Most of my chiropractic practice is in what can be called "functional medicine".
Of course, I cannot definitively rule out disease, because it is possible that an underlying disorder was missed or it has not yet manifested itself. On the basis of the past medical findings and my own tests, however, I proceed with the assumption that the presenting disorder is functional.
Copyright 2005, Arn Strasser DC
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