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Managing chronic pain: Different approaches to a complex issue


Neelima Choahan


26/07/2018 11:36:34 AM

Chronic pain affects one in five Australians. newsGP spoke with a patient and a GP about some of the best ways to tackle the situation.

Soula Mantalvanos, who has lived with chronic pain for more than a decade, believes GPs need to have quality resources to offer the best help.
Soula Mantalvanos, who has lived with chronic pain for more than a decade, believes GPs need to have quality resources to offer the best help.

Soula Mantalvanos was sitting on a fit-ball in her office when it exploded underneath her, sending her crashing to the concrete floor.
 
The accident changed the self-employed graphic designer’s life, filling it with chronic pain.
 
‘I still remember that impact. It was so big, so powerful. I felt it rocked my whole body,’ Ms Mantalvanos told newsGP.
 
‘It was excruciating, the pain was awful. I was almost paralysed, I couldn’t move.’

Chronic-Pain-Article-(1).jpgSoula Mantalvanos has experienced chronic pain since she fell when a fit-ball exploded underneath her more than 10 years ago.
 
Four-and-a-half-years after the fall, unable to stand barefoot or lie on her back, Ms Mantalvanos was finally diagnosed with pudendal neuralgia, which is pain caused by the nerve that supplies the skin between the pubic bone and tail bone.
 
According to a US study, one in five Australians live with chronic pain, including adolescents and children. This prevalence rises to one in three people over the age of 65. One in five GP consultations involves a patient with chronic pain and almost 5% report severe, disabling chronic pain.
 
Dr Paul Grinzi, a GP with an interest in addiction medicine, said all people experience pain throughout their lives.
 
‘We all know what pain feels like,’ he told newsGP.
 
‘Patients experiencing chronic pain syndrome generally will experience pain every day on an ongoing basis.
 
‘It can be quite debilitating and can lead to people becoming isolated and more unhealthy because of how they react to their pain.’
 
In August, the RACGP will hold the ‘GPADD18 – General Practice in Addiction Conference’, which will deal with some of the most common addictions and associated conditions presented to GPs, including daily pain.
 
Dr Grinzi said that while people genuinely fear pain, GPs can help.
 
‘Often, we have trained as GPs to focus on medication, [but] we know there aren’t any medications that really do a great job in helping people with their chronic pain,’ he said.
 
‘The focus now has switched away from medication and more to ensuring people’s lifestyle factors are optimised.
 
‘This includes improving sleep patterns, their exercise patterns, diet, and relationship patterns.’

Paul-Grinzi-Article.jpgDr Paul Grinzi believes that while people genuinely fear pain, GPs can help.
 
Dr Grinzi said a broader approach actually helps people recover from the consequences of their chronic pain much more than popping a pill.
 
More than 11 years after her accident, Ms Mantalvanos has learnt to live with and manage her chronic pain without being dependant on drugs.
 
‘I am doing better, but I am nowhere near the person that I was,’ she said. ‘I have to live with a lot of limitations, a lot of things that I can’t do.
 
‘It’s very hard.’
 
Ms Mantalvanos said we do not yet have proper language for pain. 
 
‘The ads that we see on television are, “Pop a tablet and continue doing what you do”,’ she said.
 
‘We have got to do better. It’s a very complex issue, but it can be solved.’
 
Ms Mantalvanos believes GPs need to have great resources on which they can rely in order to help patients. However, she said, patients also have work to do and need to be part of their pain management. 
 
‘A GP can’t help the patient if the patient is not involved,’ Ms Mantalvanos said.
 
‘I think that is a very important thing that has to be understood for a chronic condition.’
 
Ms Mantalvanos believes practitioners should explore alternative options before offering painkillers.
 
‘Tell the patient to change their behaviour before they get to the meds,’ she said. ‘The worst thing we have done … is thrown the medication at the patient without asking them to change their day-to-day activity.’
 
She said there is also no single message that can be given to those experiencing pain.
 
‘This is the complexity, that we all experience it differently.’
 
Soula Mantalvanos will be speaking at the RACGP’s GPADD18 – General Practice in Addiction Conference, to be held 4–5 August at Chirnside Park, Victoria.



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Dr Shikha Parmar   27/07/2018 12:05:42 PM

I would like to draw attention to a definitive proven treatment for chronic MSK pain not arising from autoimmune or cancer causes. Why this is still not taught in medical schools and utilised by Pain Clinics eludes me. Increasing numbers of doctors and physios and also podiatrists are adopting this Rx modality to treat chronic pain patients Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) aka Photobiomodulation (PBM) Therapy is a definitive management for chronic MSK pain arising from chronic injury, degenerative conditions & soft tissue inflammation. It’s safe, non-invasive and backed by 40 years of scientific research, trials and evidence out of Harvard and NASA etc. It treats the underlying cause of pain which is unresolved tissue repair, stimulating immune healing in a similar fashion to certain drugs such as say imiquimod, but without requiring actual drug therapy. PBM Therapy or LLLT, utilises wavelengths of infra-red light at low powers which have been proven in scientific and clinical study to move bad inflammation on and stimulate a healing response. On Australia Day 2017 Dr Roberta Chow, GP and researcher at the faculty of medicine, University of Sydney, a pioneer in the use of this treatment modality for chronic pain received an honour, AM General Division as follows: https://www.gg.gov.au/sites/default/files/files/honours/ad/ad2017/slkh83xzcb/AM%20Final%20Media%20Notes%20(A-L).pdf Part 2 will follow in next message, thx


Dr Shikha Parmar   27/07/2018 12:06:30 PM

Part 2: Also see: https://www.australiandoctor.com.au/clinical/therapy-update/treating-pain-with-lasers LLLT is now included in the WHO guidelines for treatment of chronic neck pain (Bone and Joint Decade 2000 –2010 Taskforce). The American College of Physicians has included LLLT in their 2017 guidelines for the management of low back pain. http://annals.org/aim/article/2603228/noninvasive-treatments-acute-subacute-chronic-low-back-pain-clinical-practice TAC (Victoria) have now approved this treatment for RTA victims. With the current codeine/opiate-crisis and the dangerous pit-falls of even short-midterm NSAID use, alternatives to pain management need to be promoted. References and research abound on: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Low+Level+Laser+Therapy


Henare Broughton   31/07/2018 8:58:28 AM

Approaches ought to include an update on neurophysiology and pain. Lifestyle as mentioned and fear of pain are better appreciated within the contexr of psychological medicine Finally acupuncture has shown to be very beneficial eg the elderly. Refer to Medical acupuncture and the literature and AMAC.


Dr Henare Broughton   31/07/2018 9:25:31 AM

An update on neurophysiology and psychological medicine might give us a better understanding to the chronic pain syndrome. Notably with sensitisation and de-sensitisation along the ascending tracts. Pain as an underlying anxiety disorder therefore treat the pain. Acupuncture has shown to achieve better compliance with productive outcomes. Medical acupuncture combines general practice with traditional Chinese
medicine. The literature has a number of punlished studies from Asia, USA, Europe, and some in Australia.


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