Over 1 million Americans live with some form of chronic pain everyday.
Arthritis, back injury, IBS, and the long term pain of autoimmune
disorders, all have effects and stress that impact their entire quality
of life. Pain exerts a major influence on your cardiovascular system and
your emotional health. Learning how to live with chronic pain
successfully can dramatically improve your life.
Back pain accounts
for a huge number of chronic pain sufferers. Back injuries affect over
100,000 workers every year here in California. In many cases the pain
becomes so debilitating, the injured worker becomes legally disabled.
Yet, in many cases, this can be addressed fairly easily through a
variety of therapies. One of the most overlooked causes of chronic back pain is literally at your feet. That's right! Your feet.
Finding a good podiatrist can assist many patients in finding a
solution. This can range from specially fitted shoes, with orthotic
insoles, to surgery. When you realize that your feet carry the entire
weight of your body, it becomes obvious that having "bad" feet can
create havoc with the joints in your knees and back. Restoring the
imbalance created by a back injury can work wonders, and often allow a
worker to return to a productive life again.
Spinal injury
patients who suffer from fusion problems to herniated discs now can
utilize a variety of therapies designed to lessen their pain. Finding a
pain clinic that specializes in the spinal area is a good first step.
After assessing your subjective level of pain, reviewing your history,
and studying your medical records, a plan is developed to help you
improve your overall quality of life.
Many patients have a
misconception about pain clinics. While it's true that their goal is to
help the patient get by with a minimum of pain medication, they are not
there to deny you pain relief. What a good pain team does is offer the
patient a package of pain oriented therapies, which may include
bio-feedback, visualization and relaxation techniques, as well as
support for emotional issues that often exacerbate or accompany pain.
Pain medications are often much more effective and focussed than those
found in a regular physician's office. Narcotic pain medications can be
administrated by pump, either implanted or external to the spine. This
method has proved to be much more effective for spinal pain than the
traditional oral/injectable route. Why? Because it delivers carefully
titrated doses of medication directly to the site of the pain.
Other tools being tried, are the bone growth stimulators currently used
in fracture cases. These devices are either electromagnetic or
ultrasound, and are placed directly over the injured area, for up to 10
hours a day. Early studies being conducted, indicate they are able to
ease the pain in spinal fusion patients very well. Arthroscopic surgery,
which is minimally invasive, can be used to repair or replace herniated
disks. Patients have reported such relief from the procedure, that post
surgical pain has little impact on them.
Psychotherapy or
counselling with a doctor or therapist specializing in the emotional
issues accompanying chronic pain can be a valuable way for a patient to
learn to express the anger, frustration and sense of isolation that
living with daily pain can cause. Just being able to verbalize feelings
that may be too much for family and friends, can aid you in learning how
to communicate without being angry or hostile.
Support groups,
whether on or offline, can be a tremendous resource for the chronic pain
sufferer. In a good group, you can discover tips and tricks to help you
cope with the pain, as well as the total empathy of others suffering as
you do. You might also discover the magic in helping others: it also
helps you in so many ways. For one of the worst aspects of chronic pain
is the tendency towards self-pity. We've all experienced the lows of the
why me? And the "I just can't take it anymore" days. Reaching out to
others who are often much worse off than we are, can turn a bad day into
one of immense satisfaction and joy.
Finally, the best advice I
can offer to chronic pain sufferers is to stop fighting it. Learn to
flow with your pain, and not resist it. Recognize your bad times, do
what's needed to make yourself comfortable, and relax. Treat yourself to
a long hot bubble bath or shower, and let the housework or other jobs
go. They'll still be there in the morning. Watch a movie or two,
especially comedies. Laughter has been proven to reduce pain by at least
50% in cancer patients. Live in today, enjoying the small pleasures in
life. Garden, take a short walk with someone you love, or simply sit
outdoors watching the beauty of nature.
You are in control of
how you are going to live with your pain. It's totally up to you whether
you'll embrace life and live it to the fullest, or sit there, mired in
self pity. I think you'll find that if you step outside of yourself and
make the decision to use your abilities to help others, you'll find that
life, even with pain as a constant companion, can be rich and
fulfilling.
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