Showing posts with label pain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pain. Show all posts
Thursday, June 30, 2016
The Demise of the "5th Vital Sign"
The American Medical Association came out two days ago and said that they were dropping the pain as the fifth vital sign movement because it encouraged opioid overprescribing. Even more interesting is that I did not get the news from the AMA (I am a 30 year member) but from the Pain News Network. The only stories that I could Google the next day was about the AMA defending its position against attacks from pain societies and organizations who want to maintain what I would describe as a liberal approach to opioid prescribing as the best way to approach pain. My term liberal is meant to connote a political position with no basis in science and the lack of science started in 1998 with the pain as a 5th vital sign approach. In 1996, the President of the American Pain Society declared pain as the Fifth Vital Sign. In the year 2000, the Joint Commission (then JCAHO) launched a pain initiative that described the 10 point pain scale as a "quantitative approach to pain."
I don't know if quantitative analysis is still a prerequisite for medical school, but this is a reason why it still should be. In quantitative analysis, the task is to measure chemical concentrations accurately and reproducibly. To use a quote from my old analytical chemistry text (1): "Qualitative analysis is concerned with what is present, quantitative analysis with how much is present." The ability to do this is often a major part of the grade for that course. Since the chemical composition in the samples are known - they should be determinable with precision. In some cases, a lack of accuracy can reflect problems with the analytical technique if there are widespread variations in the results. This is a true quantitative approach. Asking a person to rate their pain on a 10-point scale is not. Pain is a subjective experience influenced by a number of variables including whether the pain is acute or chronic, emotional state, the presence of an addiction, and personal biology affecting pain perception. It is not a quantitative assessment. It is as obvious as asking someone where they are on the 10-point scale and being told they are a "14". There are a lot of potential messages with that statement, but none of them involve an accurate measurement of pain. A quantitative scale has no implicit meaning - it is supposed to be a known measurable quantity no matter what.
From a medical perspective, there is also no better example of the adverse consequences of widespread screening for a problem. Chronic pain varies with age and other demographic factors. Epidemiological surveys show widely variable numbers of people with chronic pain, but some suggest an average is about 25% of the population and 10% of the population with pain that has some secondary disability. While there are no good ways to estimate the optimal amount of opioid needed to treat pain in a population, current data suggests that the US is the largest consumer of prescription opioid drugs in the world. For example, the US has 5% of the world's population and Americans use 55% of the world's supply morphine and 37% of the world supply of fentanyl. By contrast 80% of the world population uses 9.9% of the morphine and 19.7% of the world's fentanyl. The United States is clearly at the top in terms of opioid consumption.
Clinical trials have also shown that opioids are moderately effective for some forms of chronic pain and no more effective than non-opioid medications. The screening approach to chronic pain is clearly associated with overexposure to opioids, widespread availability of illicit sources of opioids, and an epidemic of overdose deaths. The idea that rapid assessments can be made with rapid qualitative screening by anyone also eliminated pain specialists as gatekeepers in the decisions about who would receive treatment with opioids for chronic noncancer pain.
In the opening days since the AMA statement, it appears that political forces are lining up to maintain the status quo. The idea that the AMA has to defend their position seems like pure rhetoric to me. How about the American Pain Society defending the original statement in the context of everything that has happened since? Despite defensive statements about how opioid prescribing was increasing before the position was adopted - the hard data suggests that it was associated with a major inflection point in opioid consumption in the USA.
The policy debate on this simple statement has far reaching effects for health policy in the United States. At every level in today's health care system there are groups of managers/administrators who have set themselves up to monitor various measurements and hold somebody accountable. I doubt that they know the difference between quantitative or qualitative measurements any more than the people who proposed that a subjective pain scale was somehow a quantitative measure.
I doubt that any one of them ever took a class in Quantitative Analytical Chemistry.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
References:
1: James S. Fritz and George H. Schenk. Quantitative Analytical Chemistry. Second Edition. Copyright 1969 by Allyn and Bacon, Boston, p 3.
Attribution:
Pain scale graphic downloaded from Shutterstock per their standard license on June 29. 2016.
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Lessons From Physical Therapy
I remember the first time I experienced any significant knee pain. My wife and I had just purchased an old house and as part of the sweat equity that young homeowners do we were going to refinish all of the hardwood floors ourselves. If you have ever tried that, the most imposing part of the task is sanding all of the floors. Hardwood floor sanders are very heavy pieces of equipment with cast iron bodies. My first task was to carry this machine that I guess easily weighed over a hundred pounds up to a high second floor in our old house. That was about 25 steps and a landing. By the time I got to the top, it felt like both knees had bottomed out and were starting to creak. At the time I was a competitive cyclist and training by putting in 200-250 miles on the roads and hills of Duluth, Minnesota. I had never encountered this type of pain before during cycling, speedskating or weight lifting. I compensated the best I could by taking the sander down just one step at a time and bringing it up and down again after we ruined the first staining attempt. Eventually the pain went away, but I had learned several valuable lessons. Cycling for example, did not cause any knee pain even after this acute injury. I developed a strong preference for cycling and skating and decided to forget about running.
A couple of years went by and I developed some pain in my lateral knee. I had already been diagnosed with gout in medical school and compared to gout pain most other musculoskeletal pain is minor. My experience with physicians diagnosing gout was very mixed and I did not want to get a recommendation for medication if something else would work better. Instead of seeing a primary care physician, I went in to see a physiatrist who happened to be a sports medicine doc. He jerked my knee around and was satisfied it was stable and showed me some basic iliotibial band stretching exercises. Within a week the pain was was gone.
My most foolhardy adventure in knee injuries was trying to extend my usual 40-50 miles training rides to 100 miles with no buildup. I was out riding the roads in Washington County and remembered a theoretical 100 mile loop that I always wanted to ride. It was a hot summer day, I felt very fast, and I had plenty of daylight so I took off. At the 3/4 mark I was coming up a long steep grade and felt some left knee soreness that persisted the rest of the way. My knee was burning when I stopped and I ignored it and did not ice it that night. By morning I had developed a significant effusion and could not bend it. I saw an orthopedic surgeon the next day who jerked my knee around, told me it was an overuse injury, and put my leg in a knee immobilizer. Within two weeks I was out cycling again.
At other times I have allowed my body to get seriously out of whack. After years of cycling I started to realize that I ended each session with severe neck and shoulder pain. After numerous adjustments to the stem length on my bike, a physical therapist figured out I was was extending my neck too far to look up from my riding position and fixed the problem by modifications to my riding position and neck exercises. At one point, I was almost exclusively cycling and got to the point it was painful to walk around the block. The solution was again exercise modification and exercises to improve hip flexibility.
All of this experience has led me to be very conscious of knees and other joints and keeping them in good working order as I age. Not just my joints but the joints of my wife, family and friends. It is kind of amazing to hear the emphasis on physical activity at all ages and yet there is no information out there on joint preservation or how to preserve your back. Many people are surprised to learn that the circulation to intervertebral disks in the spinal column is gone at some point in the late 20s. That makes biomechanics and muscle conditioning some of the most important aspects of joint and back function as you age. It also makes physical therapy and exercise some of the most important tools to maintain musculoskeletal function with aging. When I develop some kind of musculoskeletal pain, the first thing I do is call my physical therapist and schedule an appointment to see her. She does an examination and an analysis of the biomechanics of the problem and tells me how to solve it. I have been through the process many times with a physician and the main difference is that there is no biomechanical assessment, no actual manipulation at the time that may be useful, and no specific exercise program to make it go away and stay away.
The results of a medical evaluation are as predictable. You have a diagnosis of muscle or joint strain. Use ice or heat whichever one makes you feel better. I have been told by rheumatologists that there is really no scientific basis for the heat versus ice recommendation only the subjective response. And of course the recommendation for NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen) or acetaminophen. I ignore the NSAID recommendations and take as few tablets of naproxen every year as I can. I consider NSAIDs to be highly toxic drugs and avoid them even though they are effective. I had a rheumatologist at a famous clinic tell me that the best evidence that NSAIDs were effective was the negligible amount of joint cartilage that was left when patients came in for joint replacement therapy. Strong evidence that NSAIDs could knock out the pain as the joint deteriorated. The only time that I was ever offered an opioid was when I had my first gout attack. I was seen in an emergency department for severe ankle pain and discharged with a bottle of acetaminophen with codeine - a medication that is totally useless for gout pain.
In clinical practice I see a lot of people with chronic pain. I notice that many of them are taking NSAIDs on a chronic basis and experiencing complications of that therapy like renal insufficiency. I notice that practically nobody sees a physical therapist. I notice that many people are now started on oxycodone or hydrocodone for mild sprains and injuries involving much less tissue injury than many of the injuries I have sustained during sports. There are also many people who do not receive adequate advice on modifying their activities once an injury or series of injuries has been sustained. For example, should a person keep running if they have sore knees, are 30% overweight, and have radiographic and physical exam evidence of degenerative joint disease? Many people seem to have the idea that they can just wear out joints and have them replaced and the replacements will be as good as new. Some will decide that it is just time to hang it up and start to sit on the couch and watch television. They are surprised that their pain worsens with months of inactivity. Some of the patients with back pain decide: "This pain is so bad that physical therapy is not going to do anything. I am going to get surgery as soon as I can." The widespread ignorance and neglect of musculoskeletal health is mind boggling to me.
I got into an exchange with an orthopedic surgeon in our doctor's lounge one day - over lunch. He wanted to talk about narcissistic personality disorder and I wanted to talk about the biomechanics of the knee and hip joints. It was a lively exchange and in the end he agreed with me about the huge importance of biomechanics during physical activity and as a way to prevent injury and degenerative disease. It turned out he just wanted to hear about the personality disorder and did not have an opinion on it one way or the other.
I teach a lot about central nervous system plasticity in a neurobiology course that I give several times a year to different audiences. Widely defined, plasticity is experience dependent changes in the nervous system. There are a number of mechanisms that can lead to these changes. Kandel and others have pointed out that these are the mechanisms of animal learning. Two examples jump out of those lectures. The first is a physical therapy example of knee extension exercises in the treatment of knee injuries. It has been known for some time that quadriceps strength and balance through the knee are critical factors in knee rehabilitation and the prevention of future injuries. Research in this area shows that increased quadriceps strength can occur in the same session. The other example I use is a guy who wants to go to the gym to increase the size of his biceps. He starts doing curls and within 6 weeks his strength has increased by 25% but there is no muscle hypertrophy. His biceps diameter is unchanged. What do these two examples have in common?
The common thread here is CNS plasticity and everything it allows us to do. Plasticity will allow your to keep your joints healthy and relatively pain free if you allow it to. You have to be willing to accept the idea that pain can come from deconditioning and biomechanical problems that are reversible by plastic mechanisms. The only additional information needed is if it is safe to exercise and that can be provided by a physician and a physical therapist.
And the lesson for psychiatry? Chronic pain patients certainly need to hear this information especially if they are deconditioned. People addicted to opioid pain medications who are not getting any relief need to hear this information. Patients in general with exercise modifiable conditions who see psychiatrists need to hear this message. There is also a lesson for psychotherapy no matter how it is delivered. Kandel's original example of plasticity was a psychotherapy session. If your brain is modified by exercise there is no reason to think it can't be modified by anything from straightforward advice to more complicated therapies. Success in that area can lead to the limited or no use of medications and a conscious focus on what is needed to maintain health like I discuss from my own experience. I certainly don't take any medication for pain that physical therapy or exercise adequately treats. The same argument can be applied to anxiety and depression that can be adequately addressed by psychotherapy or other psychological interventions. On the other hand if most people don't know that physical therapy, exercise and activity modification successfully treats musculoskeletal pain and other problems they are unlikely to try.
George Dawson, MD, DFAPA
Supplementary 1: There are currently only 4 Medline references on biomechanics plasticity sports. This seems like a promising area for sports medicine, physical therapy, and rehab medicine.
Supplementary 2: The photo at the top of the page is an exercise I do to alleviate knee pain that I learned from the book The Knee Crisis Handbook by Brian Halpern, MD with Laura Tucker. The exercise is called the quad set (p. 238) and although the author suggests a towel under the knee, I am doing it on a styrofoam roller. This book contains a wealth of information on knee health. I do not recommend doing what you see in the picture without reading the book. I have no conflict of interests related to this book and purchased it online entirely for my education.
Supplementary 3: I could not figure out where to fit it in above but after 25 years riding with 175 mm crankarms on my bike, I dropped them back to 172.5 mm. The bike fit expert for my new bike was convinced it was a good thing to do. My new bike rides so much differently it is difficult to know what to attribute to crankarm length.
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