Showing posts with label Chronic pain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chronic pain. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

Understanding Myofascial Pain Syndrome

Image source: spine-health.com
Myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) is a chronic pain disorder that affects the body’s musculoskeletal system, particularly the fascia, or the connective tissue that covers a single muscle or a muscle group. In MPS, the muscle areas affected, also called trigger points, causes pressure and pain on that site. However, it is also common for seemingly unrelated parts of the body to experience discomfort, also called referred pain.

MPS is different from muscle tension in that it persists for a long period, and can even worsen when left untreated.

The primary cause of MPS is the tightness of muscle fibers brought about by injuries to the muscle or excessive strain on the muscle or muscle group, ligament, or tendon. Even repetitive motions and lack of activity can cause the condition.

Other factors that contribute to the occurrence of MPS are stress, anxiety, depression, and fatigue. The theory as to why this is so is that those who go through these states are more likely to repeatedly – and inadvertently – clench their muscles.
Image source: youtube.com

There are various ways to treat MPS, including oral medication, physical or massage therapy, the “stretch and spray” technique (where the trigger point is applied with coolant and then slowly stretched), trigger point injections, or a combination of these treatments.

Interventional pain physician Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D., uses a multidisciplinary approach of care when treating her patients who are suffering from back pain, neck pain, pelvic pain, myofascial pain, and other conditions. Click here for more articles about pain management or relief.




Sunday, July 30, 2017

How cognitive behavioral therapy helps ease pain

Many Americans struggle with body aches and discomfort on a daily basis, where pain asserts itself while one lies in bed or performs normal activities. In the ongoing pursuit of relief, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) emerges as a promising pain management method. 

Image source: medicalnewstoday.com 

Psychiatrist Aaron Beck pioneered one form of talk therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, in the 1960s. It helps patients identify and develop abilities to change their negative thoughts and behaviors.  

The assumption is that individuals, not external events and factors, create their experiences and pain. Changing these negative thoughts and actions is believed to transform pain awareness and, in turn, lead to better coping skills amid experiencing the same level of pain. 

How can CBT help relieve pain? First, it changes one’s perception of pain, changing emotions, thoughts, and behaviors relating to it and putting the experience in a better context. It can also alter the brain’s physical responses, reducing the effects of pain-induced stress on pain-control chemicals such as norepinephrine and serotonin. 

Often a combination of psychotherapy and behavioral training, CBT is also typically used together with other pain management techniques. These include medication, weight loss, physical therapy, massage, and surgery in extreme cases. 

If one is eyeing CBT for pain relief or management, it is important to discuss the strategy with their doctor, who may recommend a chronic pain specialist. Most sessions are made up of 45-minute to two-hour weekly sessions, done in groups or with individuals. This increasingly popular method, too, is usually covered by health insurance. 

Image source: medicalnewstoday.com 

Pain management expert Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D. , uses a multidisciplinary approach in treating chronic pain, combining injection treatments, medications, and physical and behavior therapy. Visit this page for similar reads.

Thursday, June 29, 2017

Repetitive strain injury: What are the warning signs?

Repetitive strain injury is commonly felt in the forearms and elbows, wrists and hands, and in the neck and shoulders. This condition, unfortunately, is usually overlooked especially if the pain subsides in a few days. However, the condition can be debilitating without the right treatment. Here are some of the signs that a person might be experiencing repetitive strain injury (RSI): 

Image source: Engineersjournal.ie

1. Numbness, throbbing, or intense pain in the upper limbs 
2. Weakness or stiffness in the aforementioned areas 
3. Lack of control in holding objects 
4. Inability to do simple tasks such as typing, texting, lifting bags, or chopping vegetables 
5. Cramps in the upper extremities 

Many people become aware of the symptoms when they do a specific task. When there's pain associated with day-to-day tasks like typing or playing an instrument, this could possibly be a case of RSI. 

If the condition has been triggered by tasks at work, employees should look into the office setup. The heights of the seats, tables, and computers could be one of the reasons for the strain. Cold temperatures that add tension to the muscles can also contribute to the pain. While in treatment, it is best to minimize the use of the injured part of the body. In most cases, taking painkillers, using splint, and undergoing hot and cold therapy are some of the simple methods that can alleviate the symptoms. But for those with complicated cases, taking a leave from work or school is recommended to allow the muscles to heal fully. 

Image source: Newhealthguide.org

Pain management specialist Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D. performs procedures such as selective nerve root injections, sympathetic nerve blocks, and radiofrequency nerve ablation. Visit this blog for related articles.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

A Tip Sheet For Exercising When Suffering From Chronic Pain

Image Source: webmd.com
Patients who suffer from chronic pain are still told to engage in physical activity. Exercise is a major part of overall wellness and health. That said, the thought of movement can be scary for people are constantly in pain. It is a fact that too much of the wrong activity can make the pain worse. This is why pain management specialists have come up with helpful tips for exercising when one has chronic pain.

Start small and build gradually: The first major step is to make the decision. This may sound obvious, but an essential part of any exercise program is the will and desire to move. People can often become trapped in their belief that any movement will trigger an attack. Patients can slowly build their confidence by starting small. The World Health Organization recommends brisk walking for 30 minutes a day to maintain overall health. Those who have chronic pain can begin with just 10 minutes of moderate walking. Even these tiny steps are enough to ensure improved health.

Move at a good pace: Patients with chronic pain should always remember to listen to their bodies. No amount of media should influence one’s decision to exercise -- especially with how fast or how slow one should move. There is, however, a thin but distinct line between listening to one’s body and being stubborn with movement. It is, therefore, best to ask a close friend or family member to monitor one’s behavior and act as a support system.

Image Source: nbcnews.com
Strive for balance: As much as possible, it is best for patients to follow an exercise routine that has elements of cardiovascular, strengthening, and stretching. This will, hopefully, help relieve some pain as muscles become stronger.

Most importantly, patients should remember to be patient with themselves. With the proper therapy, exercise will soon be easier to do.

Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D., specializes in pain management. For more information on managing chronic pain, like this Facebook page.




Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Treatment Options for those Suffering from Chronic Pain and Opioid Addiction

Image Source: breakingthecycles.wordpress.com
Those suffering from chronic pain are more at risk for an opioid addiction. The correlation can easily be seen: those in pain usually depend on various types of opioids for their pain treatment or management. These two conditions are distinct and are expressed in different ways for every individual. This is why many medical professionals take a multi-dimensional approach to the management chronic pain, and address the high possibility of an opioid addiction.

Similar to other chronic conditions such as asthma or diabetes, both pain and addictive conditions typically have psycho-behavioral and biological factors that shape how the conditions are expressed. It is therefore important that physicians thoroughly comb and analyze patients’ complete medical history. Treatment options are designed based on consistent dialogue. Patients are also fully encouraged to engage in self-care and constant introspection. It must be noted that both conditions require long-term clinical care so it is essential that the patient feels comfortable with his or her clinician so that an effective treatment plan can be designed and implemented.
Image Source: rapidmedicaldetox.wordpress.com

The patient should also understand that pain and addiction share a number of similar clinical features such as mood and sleep disturbances, functional losses, and high levels of stress. Usually, one condition reinforces the other. Treatment plans will generally involve biopsychosocial components to improve recovery.

Lastly, it must be noted that while addiction can be fully treated, chronic pain can only be properly managed. Medical research is still tracking down a cure for chronic pain.

Live a full and productive life despite any pain condition with the help of Dr. Melanie Novak, a specialist for all types of pain including headaches, neck and lower back pain, shoulder, hip and knee discomfort, and various types of joint pain. For more information on her practice, follow this Twitter account.

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

REPOST: 5 Ways to Survive and Thrive in Cold Weather with Chronic Pain

The final stretch of the holidays is approaching, and certainly no one can afford to be absent from the usual yuletide activities because of sore and aching bodies. PainCamp.com lists down five ways to stay pain-free during the remaining days of the season.  

Image Source: paincamp.com

Pain Camp is located in the upper midwest region of the United States of America. We’ve been blessed that we’ve not seen extreme sub-zero temps during the winter time in several years. So what is a Pain Camper to do in cold weather? How can we go from surviving to thriving with Chronic Pain in the winter time?

Temperature in the winter never bothered me BCP. In fact, I used to do a lot of skiing (downhill and XC) and was even on the Cross Country Ski team in High School (I wasn’t very good, but hey, I looked darn cute in my spandex suit at that age). ACP is a completely different story. My body’s “I HATE WINTER” response is not effective as I live where winter happens. It happens every year. My body (and my mind) need to survive and thrive because I will most likely continue to reside here as this is where my family and friends are.

Pain Camper Plan of Action

Bundle Up!

Those of us moving from surviving to thriving have decided “We don’t care what other people think” and this applies to being puffy like a marshmallow with all of our layers in the winter time too! Layers, hats, mittens, gloves, scarves, warm socks, throw it all on! Long johns, hoodies and scarves are my go-to clothing in the winter. This year, I’m even donning a turtle neck.

Think Warm!

When my Physical Therapist first proposed this idea, I looked at her like she had 3 heads. Then I remembered how powerful our brains are and what I used to teach people in therapy sessions (think guided imagery). Before you walk out into freezing cold, close your eyes and briefly imagine your muscles being relaxed and that you’re on a nice warm beach laying in the sun. Yes, this only works for a few minutes for me (until my CNS takes over), but it does help me increase my awareness and be mindful of how tense my muscles are. When I’m more aware of my muscle tension, I can use my tools to help relax them.

Energy Conservation!

In Chronic Pain Rehab I learned about the importance of conserving my energy. When I look at my daily list of Pain Camper activities, I need to pick and choose what I can realistically do on that day, at that specific time, with my level of pain. I also need to be mindful of looking a day or two ahead. My experience, strength and hope: yesterday (30+ degrees) I took care of the car (gas, wash, air in tires) and got errands taken care. Today (3 degrees) I went out to one place. Tomorrow (-5 as the high) I will be out driving over 100 miles (in and out of 3 homes) for work. Tomorrow is going to be a “pulled pork from the crock-pot for dinner” day.

Blankets, heating pads and hot packs – oh my!

For Christmas, my Supportive Spouse got me a full size heated blanket. I turn it on about 30 minutes before getting into bed and it keeps me toasty all night. I have my eye on a throw that went on clearance for the living room so I don’t have to keep hauling the full size back and forth. Heating pads and hot packs are great for specific areas of pain. Microwaveable wraps are awesome too!

Warm House! 

I know that this increases our costs somewhat, but a cold Pain Camper is not a happy Pain Camper. We have our thermostat a bit higher on the sub-zero days. We also have invested in some other ways to control the drafts such as plastic over the windows and plug covers for electrical plugins that are not in use. After an ice dam a couple of years ago, we re-insulated the attic and that has helped as well.


Don't let chronic pain ruin your holiday. Dr. Melanie Novak offers treatments that will help you enjoy a worry-free season. Visit this website to help you manage chronic pain all year round.

Sunday, November 16, 2014

REPOST: Smoking linked to increased risk of chronic back pain

A new study published in the journal Human Brain Mapping suggests that people who smoke are more likely to develop chronic back pain. Smokers are advised to quit their habit to reduce the risk of developing the disease. Medical News Today has the full story below.

 Image source: Medicalnewstoday.com

People who smoke are much more likely to develop chronic back pain than those who do not smoke. These are the findings of a new study by researchers from Northwestern University in Evanston, IL.

This is not the first study to link smoking to chronic pain. But according to the research team, led by Bogdan Petre of the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern, it is the first study to suggest that smoking interferes with a brain circuit associated with pain, making smokers more prone to chronic back pain.

Back pain is one of the most common medical problems in the US, estimated to affect 8 out of 10 Americans at some point in their lives. According to the American Chiropractic Association, back pain is the main reason for missed days at work and the second most common reason for doctor's visits.

This latest study, published in the journal Human Brain Mapping, suggests that smokers could reduce their risk of developing chronic back pain by quitting the habit.

To reach their findings, the researchers analyzed 160 participants who had recently developed subacute back pain, defined as back pain lasting 4-12 weeks. They also assessed 32 participants with chronic back pain - defined as having back pain for 5 years or more - and 35 participants with no back pain.

On five separate occasions over a 1-year period, all participants completed questionnaires that gathered information about their smoking status and other health conditions. They also underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans.

The brain scans, the researchers say, were used to assess activity between two brain regions - the nucleus accumbens and the medial prefrontal cortex. Both of these regions play a role in addictive behavior and motivated learning.

Smoking increases brain activity that reduces resilience to chronic back pain

Petre and his team found that the connection between these two brain regions plays a crucial role in chronic pain development. They explain that the stronger the connection between them, the less resilient an individual is to chronic pain.

Smoking appears to affect this connection. The researchers found that compared with nonsmoking participants, those who smoked had a stronger connection between the nucleus accumbens and the medial prefrontal cortex, increasing their risk of chronic back pain. The team calculated that smokers are three times more likely to develop chronic back pain than nonsmokers.
 
"But we saw a dramatic drop in this circuit's activity in smokers who - of their own will - quit smoking during the study," explains Petre. "So when they stopped smoking, their vulnerability to chronic pain also decreased."
Commenting on their findings, the researchers say:
"We conclude that smoking increases risk of transitioning to chronic back pain, an effect mediated by corticostriatal circuitry involved in addictive behavior and motivated learning."
The team points out that smoking participants who managed their chronic back pain with medication - such as anti-inflammatory drugs - did experience some pain reduction, but that these medications did not alter brain circuitry.

As such, they suggest that smokers could reduce their risk of chronic back pain by engaging in smoking cessation programs or other behavioral interventions that may help them quit the habit.
Because the team's findings show that smoking affects brain circuitry linked to chronic pain, they suggest that there may be a link between addiction and chronic pain in general.

Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D., is a pain management specialist who treats all types of chronic pain. Read more about pain management on this blog.

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

REPOST: Taking Your Life Back From Chronic Pain

Millions of Americans suffer from chronic pain. While there is still no “magic pill” for the illness, there are ways to manage it. This article from US News Health features some of the people who have learned to cope with chronic pain.

Image Source: health.usnews.com 

Imagine gritting it out with sharp, throbbing pain from a migraine or back injury for just a few hours. Or doing your best to concentrate at work through the ache of an abscessed tooth.

Now, imagine coping with similar pain for years – and though it goes away at times, it's never for long. Sadly, that's the reality for millions of Americans. Chronic pain can take over a person’s life, but it doesn't have to. Still, there's no magic pill. Learning to manage pain is a process you go through and a decision you make.

Pain’s Wide Reach

Pain is invisible – others can't see it or touch it. There isn’t a blood test that measures pain, or an X-ray that confirms its existence. It can be hard for people to get their pain taken seriously. But pain is a big problem. About 100 million U.S. adults are affected by chronic pain, and it costs up to $635 billion yearly in medical care and lost productivity, according to a 2011 Institute of Medicine report.
Backaches and headaches (especially migraines) are the most common pain culprits, but there are many others. Arthritis, injuries, pain from cancer or heart disease, genetic conditions like sickle cell disease, and surgical complications like severed nerves – any of these can result in pain that becomes a continual presence.


Here to Stay

For Penney Cowan, founder of the American Chronic Pain Association, the journey with pain began nearly 40 years ago. Fibromyalgia was the reason, but it took six years for doctors to properly diagnose it. Even today, the cause of fibromylagia is still unclear, but common symptoms include widespread muscle pain, fatigue and sleep problems. In Cowan's case, pain affected nearly her entire body and worsened to the point that her quality of life was "down the tubes," she says. "I couldn't even hold a cup of coffee; it was too painful." It became so bad, she says, that it consumed every waking thought and moment.

When does pain cross the line from temporary setback to lifelong condition? "If the pain's been around for five years, the chances of having zero pain are probably pretty small," says Robin Hamill-Ruth, an anesthesiologist, pain management specialist and president of the American Board of Pain Medicine. At that point, she says, pain management becomes the goal: "How do you get the pain to a level that it doesn't control [patients'] lives – they control it?"


Facing Loss

Mariann Farrell, ​67, was a music educator in Philadelphia until two car collisions ended her career years ago. “Horrible” sciatica – pain from the sciatic nerve that travels from the lower back and down the legs – kept her bedridden for a year and a half, leaving her husband to cope with two kids, the household and everything else. “I got very depressed, helpless and hopeless,” she recalls.

At first, Farrell’s strategy was one that many patients fall into – doing less and less in an effort to avoid anything that might trigger pain. “I thought, if I can lie in bed and be very quiet and still, the pain would go away,” she says. But it only got worse. She says the impetus for getting out of bed came as she was crying alone while the rest of her family attended her son’s chorus recital. “I asked myself what I was doing,” she says. Farrell decided she might as well be watching her son in pain, rather than being bedridden in pain.

Chronic pain "is a loss of function; it's a loss of self," Hamill-Ruth says. Unlike acute pain, where the predominant emotion is anxiety, for people with chronic pain, it's depression. "When people have lost function – they may have had a back operation – there are just things they can't do," she says. The resulting grief, she says, is no less than it would be for the loss of a limb. People like Farrell, who could no longer teach the music she loves, or a manual laborer who's the family breadwinner but can no longer do physical work, have to find ways to "redefine" themselves, Hamill-Ruth says. "Once a person identifies how they can be a person who lives with chronic pain, and still have a quality of life and still be a person, they tend to do much better."

No Easy Fixes

When pain begins, sufferers first try over-the-counter painkillers such as Tylenol and Advil, or simple home remedies. If those don’t help much, they may ask their physician for stronger prescription drugs to treat pain. These include opioid (narcotic) painkillers such as Vicodin or Oxycontin, certain types of antidepressant or anti-seizure medications, and corticosteroid injections. But people who expect chronic pain to disappear after swallowing a pill or putting on a patch are usually disappointed. "Pain medicine doesn't take away the pain," Farrell says of her own experience. "It mitigates it."

With growing scrutiny as issues of opioid addiction, overdose and improper prescribing emerge, doctors are more reluctant to start patients on​ these painkillers. That may not be a bad thing, according to Hamill-Ruth. "Opiates aren’t very good, for all the noise they get," she says. "They don’t work that well for a long period of time; they're better for acute [than chronic] pain, but there are enough side effects and problems" to limit their usefulness.

Some patients go through increasingly invasive procedures to control pain. These could be nerve-block numbing injections or implanted devices to deliver anesthetics straight to the spine. And some people resort to surgery, such as spinal decompression or disc replacement for intractable back pain.

But when chronic pain withstands medical procedures and prescriptions, health providers may eventually say, "Just learn to live with it," Cowan says. In response, she adds, the American Chronic Pain Association’s​ new catchphrase is​ "Don't tell me to live with it. Teach me how to do it.”

If relief from a pill or procedure is often only partial – pain drops from a 10 to a 7 – people usually give up and move on to the next pill or procedure. But that’s not always the answer, Cowan says. Pain management involves finding a combination of methods that works for you. Medication-free options include physical reconditioning – physical therapy, stretching exercises and weight lifting – to mind-based treatments, such as cognitive behavioral therapy, biofeedback and hypnosis, and stress management techniques like meditation. The most effective techniques vary for each individual. With Farrell, for instance, music therapy is a must. For Cowan, it’s her morning stretching routine.

Weight loss is the most valuable modification for many chronic pain patients, according to Hamill-Ruth, because it relieves the burden of additional weight on the joints. Movement is essential for all patients, she says. "Staying active is just critical. If you don't [move your body] it gets weak, and it's a downward spiral of deconditioning, being more vulnerable to injury." It helps to set achievable goals for yourself, she adds, even if it's walking three minutes a day and next week bumping it up to four minutes.

Seeking Specialists

Decades ago, the Cleveland Clinic rheumatologist who confirmed Cowan’s fibromyalgia told her she’d have to live with the pain. But he also referred her, with some skepticism, to an in-house pain specialist who could teach her how to live with it. Equally skeptical, she entered the program and with seven weeks of comprehensive pain management, she says, “I went from patient to person again.”

Thirty-five years later, pain management is an established medical subspecialty. But with only about 3,500 U.S. physicians board-certified in pain care, that means there are 28,000 people with chronic pain per specialist, according to the IOM. So primary care providers deliver the bulk of treatment for chronic pain. When it comes to finding a pain practitioner, some are more qualified than others, Ruth-Hamill says. "You can look up a pain doctor in the phone book and can't tell whether they did a two-year pain fellowship or a weekend course." Her group is pushing for stricter credentialing that requires a background in comprehensive pain management that includes familiarity with psychiatric and complementary medicine.

Sharing Your Pain (Management)

Isolation is a hazard of chronic pain, Farrell says, making depression worse, and it's crucial to interact with others in a similar situation. She recalls the moment she became aware that others shared her struggle, while attending her first support group meeting. "Having them understand me and my life, and I theirs, was of great emotional benefit," she says. She didn't have to explain her pain; they understood. She now facilitates a support group whose members listen daily to a music CD she put together.

When it comes to pain management, the focus is increasingly shifting toward the role of patients – with an emphasis on self-management and becoming an active part of the health care team. To further that team mentality, Cowan is currently traveling to Veterans Affairs​ hospitals and talking to patients and health providers about how to live with chronic pain and bridge the gap between the health care provider and the person with pain. For her part, Hamill-Ruth says pain management is a team sport, and patients are the key players. She describes a patient who did really well with self-management after turning her attitude around. "She said, 'I finally figured out that this is my pain,'" Hamill-Ruth recalls, "'and I'm going to have to own it if I want to get better.'"

Dr. Melanie Novak, M.D., specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of all types of pain and provides an individualized treatment plan for her patients’ unique needs. For more discussions on chronic pain management, follow this Facebook page.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

REPOST: Managing Chronic Pain: A Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Approach

People experiencing chronic pain have to target the primary organ causing their discomfort---the brain. According to this WebMD article, Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) helps pain patients manage their negative thoughts and behaviors so they could cope better with their situation. Read on about the advantages of CBT:
Your body is aching and the pain feels unbearable. The last thing you want to hear is, “it’s all in your head.” For people with chronic pain, the discomfort is very real, and they know all too well they feel it in their bodies.
Image Source: www.webmd.com

“If you are lying in bed and hurting, the pain is your whole world,” says Joseph Hullett, MD, board certified psychiatrist and senior medical director for OptumHealth Behavioral Solutions in Golden Valley, Minn.
Enter cognitive behavioral therapy as a method of pain management.

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a form of talk therapy that helps people identify and develop skills to change negative thoughts and behaviors. CBT says that individuals -- not outside situations and events -- create their own experiences, pain included. And by changing their negative thoughts and behaviors, people can change their awareness of pain and develop better coping skills, even if the actual level of pain stays the same.

“The perception of pain is in your brain, so you can affect physical pain by addressing thoughts and behaviors that fuel it,” Hullett tells WebMD.
What can CBT do for you? Cognitive behavioral therapy helps provide pain relief in a few ways. First, it changes the way people view their pain. “CBT can change the thoughts, emotions, and behaviors related to pain, improve coping strategies, and put the discomfort in a better context,” Hullett says. You recognize that the pain interferes less with your quality of life, and therefore you can function better.

CBT can also change the physical response in the brain that makes pain worse. Pain causes stress, and stress affects pain control chemicals in the brain, such as norepinephrine and serotonin, Hullett says. “CBT reduces the arousal that impacts these chemicals,” he says. This, in effect, may make the body’s natural pain relief response more powerful.

To treat chronic pain, CBT is most often used together with other methods of pain management. These remedies may include medications, physical therapy, weight loss, massage, or in extreme cases, surgery. But among these various methods of pain control, CBT is often one of the most effective.
“In control group studies, CBT is almost always as least as good as or better than other treatments,” Hullett says. Plus, CBT has far fewer risks and side effects than medications or surgery.

To help provide pain relief, cognitive behavioral therapy:

  • Encourages a problem-solving attitude. “The worst thing about chronic pain is the sense of learned helplessness -- ‘there is nothing I can do about this pain,’” Hullett says. If you take action against the pain (no matter what that action is), you will feel more in control and able to impact the situation,” he says.
  • Involves homework. “CBT always includes homework assignments,” Hullett says. “These may involve keeping track of the thoughts and feelings associated with your pain throughout the day in a journal, for example. “Assignments are then reviewed in each session and used to plan new homework for the following week.”  
Image Source: www.webmd.com
  • Fosters life skills. CBT is skills training. “It gives patients coping mechanisms they can use in everything they do,” Hullet says. You can use the tactics you learn for pain control to help with other problems you may encounter in the future, such as stress, depression, or anxiety.
  • Allows you to do it yourself. Unfortunately, good qualified cognitive behavioral therapists aren’t available in all areas. Luckily, you can conduct CBT on your own as a method of pain control, even if you’ve never set foot in a therapist’s office. “CBT is a cookbook approach. It can easily be applied to self-help and computerized programs,” Hullett says. And the literature supports that these self-help methods can be just as effective for pain management as one-on-one sessions.
Dr. Melanie Novak, diagnoses and treats all types of pain using a multidisciplinary approach. Visit this website for a list of all the procedures she performs.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

REPOST: How Your Knees Can Predict the Weather

Many people who suffer from arthritis and migraine believe that their condition worsens during weather changes. Well, they could be right. The Wall Street Journal reports that scientists have found a link between pain symptoms and weather patterns. 

Image Source: online.wsj.com

The Wolff family of Paramus, N.J., was eyeing the gathering clouds and debating whether to cancel a planned park trip when 6-year-old Leora piped up with an idea: "Let's call Grandma. Her knees always know when it's going to rain!"

Leora's grandmother, Esther Polatsek, says she started being sensitive to the weather in her 20s, when a fracture in her foot would ache whenever a snowstorm approached. Now 66 and plagued by rheumatoid arthritis, Mrs. Polatsek says she suffers flare-ups whenever the weather is about to change.

"It's just uncanny. Sometimes it'll be gorgeous out, but I'll have this awful pain. And sure enough, the next morning it rains," she says. "It may be just a few drops, but it makes my body crazy."
Do weather conditions really aggravate physical pain?

It is one of the longest running controversies in medicine.

Hippocrates in 400 B.C. noticed that some illnesses were seasonal. The traditional Chinese medicine term for rheumatism (fengshi bing) translates to "wind-damp disease."

But modern scholars have gotten inconsistent results in studies that tried to match weather patterns to reported pain symptoms—leading some to dismiss the connection as highly subjective or all in sufferers' minds.

"People's beliefs about arthritis pain and the weather may tell more about the workings of the mind than of the body," concluded the late Stanford psychologist Amos Tversky in the mid-1990s, after comparing the pain reports of 18 rheumatoid-arthritis patients with local weather conditions for a year and finding no connection.

Still, other studies have linked changes in temperature, humidity or barometric pressure to worsening pain from rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis, as well as headaches, tooth aches, jaw pain, scar pain, low-back pain, pelvic pain, fibromyalgia, trigeminal neuralgia (a searing pain in the face), gout and phantom-limb pain.

Scientists don't understand all the mechanisms involved in weather-related pain, but one leading theory holds that the falling barometric pressure that frequently precedes a storm alters the pressure inside joints. Those connections between bones, held together with tendons and ligaments, are surrounded and cushioned by sacs of fluid and trapped gasses.

"Think of a balloon that has as much air pressure on the outside pushing in as on the inside pushing out," says Robert Jamison, a professor of anesthesia and psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. As the outside pressure drops, the balloon—or joint—expands, pressing against surrounding nerves and other tissues. "That's probably the effect that people are feeling, particularly if those nerves are irritated in the first place," Dr. Jamison says.

Not everyone with arthritis has weather-related pain, says Patience White, a rheumatologist at George Washington University School of Medicine and a vice president of the Arthritis Foundation. "It's much more common in people with some sort of effusion," an abnormal buildup of fluid in or around a joint that frequently occurs with inflammation.

Many patients swear that certain weather conditions exacerbate their pain. Consequently, orthopedists, rheumatologists, neurologists, family physicians, chiropractors, physical therapists—even personal trainers—report an increase in grousing among their clients when the temperature drops or a storm approaches.

"I can tell you emphatically there are certain days where practically every patient complains of increased pain," says Aviva Wolff, an occupational therapist at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City, and Mrs. Polatsek's daughter. "The more dramatic the weather change, the more obvious it is."

Both the Weather Channel and AccuWeather have indexes on their websites that calculate the likelihood of aches and pains across the country, based on barometric pressure, temperature, humidity and wind. Changes in those conditions tend to affect joints even more than current conditions do, says AccuWeather meteorologist Michael Steinberg, which is why the Arthritis Index shows more risk the day before a storm or a sharp drop in temperature is forecast.

Image Source: online.wsj.com

 Some sufferers say their joints can be more accurate than meteorologists. Rheumatoid-arthritis sufferer Bill Balderaz, 38, president of a digital-marketing firm in Columbus, Ohio, recalls feeling "the worst arthritis pain I've ever had—I could barely move" one day last year, even though it was sunny and clear. By midafternoon, a land-based hurricane known as a derecho with 80 mile-per-hour winds unexpectedly buffeted Ohio and three other states, traveling 600 miles in 10 hours and knocking out power for 10 days. "The storm caught everyone off guard. It was clear one minute and then the skies opened up," Mr. Balderaz says.

Tests on animals seem to bear out the impact of weather. In one study, guinea pigs with induced back pain exhibited signs of increased pain by pulling in their hindpaws in low barometric pressure.

Cold weather seems to raise the risk of stroke, heart attacks and sudden cardiac death, some research shows. Heart-attack risk rose 7% for every 10 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit) drop in temperature, according to a study of nearly 16,000 patients in Belgium, presented at the European Society of Cardiology last month. British researchers studying years of data on implanted defibrillators found that the risk of ventricular arrhythmia—an abnormal heart rhythm that can lead to sudden death—rose 1.2% for every 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit drop, according to a study in the International Journal of Biometerology last month.

Once blamed on physically demanding tasks like shoveling snow, the increased heart risk due to cold may be due to thickening blood and constricting blood vessels, researchers think.

And rising humidity may cause joints to swell and stiffen. In fact, tendons, ligaments, muscles, bones and other tissues all have varying densities, so they may expand or contract in different ways in changing conditions, Dr. Jamison says.

In people with chronic inflammation from arthritis or past injuries, even slight irritations due to the weather can aggravate sensory nerve cells, known as nociceptors, that relay pain signals to the brain. That may explain why some people with neuropathic pain and phantom-limb pain also report weather-related flare-ups.

"Fibromyalgia patients seem to be the most sensitive," says Susan Goodman, a rheumatologist at the Hospital for Special Surgery. She also notes that while some people seem to be extremely sensitive to weather, others with similar conditions aren't, for reasons that aren't clear. That may explain why many studies find no clear association, she says.

Some weather conditions seem to relieve pain. In one study, the warm, high-pressure Chinook winds common to western Canada lessened patients' neuropathic pain, the kind brought on by disease or injury. For other patients, the same climate increased migraines and sinus headaches.

Some pain sufferers say they feel better in warm, dry climates where weather conditions seldom change. When she went to Israel in the 1990s, "I felt like I was 20 years younger when I stepped off the plane," says Mrs. Polatsek, the rheumatoid-arthritis patient.

But studies haven't consistently borne out the benefits of one climate over another. "There really is no place in the U.S. where people report more or less weather-related pain," says Dr. Jamison. He surveyed 557 arthritis sufferers in four cities in 1995 and found that more than 60% believed the weather affected their pain—regardless of whether they lived in San Diego, Boston, Nashville, Tenn., or Worcester, Mass.

Visiting a warm, dry climate may bring temporary relief, Dr. Jamison adds. "But if you live there full time, your body seems to acclimatize and you become sensitive to even subtle weather changes." 


Dr. Melanie Novak specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of various types of pain, including arthritis and migraine. This website provides more information on pain management.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

REPOST: September is Pain Awareness Month

The healthcare industry has attempted to raise awareness about different diseases and conditions by assigning a day or month each year to learning more about the illness.  The month of September is Pain Awareness Month.  The American Chronic Pain Association posts this article as a reminder on their website.
The month of September has been declared Pain Awareness Month.  Pain Awareness Month is a time when various organizations work to raise public awareness of issues in the area of pain and pain management. 

The first Pain Awareness Month was in 2001, when the ACPA led a coalition of groups to establish September as Pain Awareness Month.  ACPA established Partners for Understanding Pain and 80 organizations, both health care professionals and consumer groups, including the NAACP supported the effort. 

The key to raising awareness is to get involved.   There are many things that you can do to help promote Pain Awareness Month.
  • Talk with Friends & Family:  Let them know that September is Pain Awareness Month.  “Like” the ACPA on Facebook.  Encourage your friends to do the same
  •  Talk with your Healthcare Provider: Let them know that September is Pain Awareness Month.  You also can share the tools to better communicate with your healthcare team found at the links below:
  • Call your local government and community leaders to let them know about Pain Awareness Month and issues of pain and pain management.  Tools to communicate with governmental and community leaders are available Click Here
  • Call your local media and ask them if they are doing a story on Pain Awareness Month. Tools to communicate with media can be found here 
  • Donate to the ACPA: Your contributions allow us to help fulfill our mission  and work year-round to raise awareness and support for those with chronic pain. Click here to donate
  • Take care of yourself!  Take time out for yourself this month.  Tools to help take care of yourself are below:

Dr. Melanie Novak treats patients who suffer from chronic pain using a range of medication, injection treatments and therapy. Read more about managing pain on this blog.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Understanding what it takes to fight an invisible disease


Image source: agoramedia.com

Pain management experts, like Dr. Melanie Novak, and the people behind the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine understand how chronic pain works. The problem is many people don’t.

An anesthesiologist at Vancouver General Hospital, Dr. Michael Negraeff shared his concerns about labeling chronic pain as a mental disorder in an interview for The Huffington Post. He believed that people dealing with persistent pain are already juggling heavy emotions, and judgmental looks from others will certainly not be of help.

“Worldwide, pain is one of the most significant causes of suffering, disability, and impairment,” Dr. Negraeff explains. “People living with persistent pain are four times as likely to attempt suicide as the general public.”


Image source: northeastpainmanagementclinic.com

The idea of mislabeling chronic pain as a psychological problem rather than a physical one stems from the absence of external signs and obvious symptoms. This is why this kind of pain is considered as an “invisible disease.” Unless they start to complain or talk about the pain, patients will continue to look normal to the people around them.

Dr. Negraeff reiterates the importance of providing support to people dealing with chronic pain, especially from the physicians. Doctors should never mindlessly dismiss complains on discomfort and distress because they do not have an idea of the extent of anxiety that the patients are dealing with.

For this reason, Dr. Negraeff asks a meaningful question to his colleagues: “Shouldn't our efforts be put towards pain management rather than on providing clinicians with excuses for not taking their patients' suffering seriously?”


Image source: smartpainmgmt.com

More information on the field of pain management can be found on this website.