Living With - and Without - Pain
Years of living with a neuromuscular disease can take their toll in pain.
"Mental Chaos" by Mandi V. Zeiler |
by June Price
"A Percodan, a Pepsi and a cigarette ... "
These were Claudia's demands each morning even before she fully opened her eyes.
These habits took the edge off the intense pain she felt, so she could be
dressed and transferred into her power chair each morning.
As the day progressed, so did her self-medication. By midday, she was in a
pharmaceutical whirlwind; and by nighttime, she was crashing. This was her
daily ritual — all in the attempt to escape the ravages of pain and discomfort
of living for more than 30 years with an undetermined neuromuscular disease.
Then it happened. Following routine surgery, Claudia slipped into a coma. Nurses
said her vital signs wouldn't stabilize. Days later, she was dead.
When I helped her family clean her apartment after her death, we found pill
bottles in, on and under everything: table, counter, bed, floor, medicine
cabinet, refrigerator, drawers. Labels reflected a myriad of doctors, hospitals
and pharmacies spanning years. I no longer asked why Claudia had died but,
instead, why she hadn't died sooner.
I never had much sympathy for Claudia back then, often wondering if the pain she
claimed wasn't "all in her head" — a cry for attention. But 20 years later,
Claudia has come back to haunt me with a vengeance.
Pain now controls my days, much as it once did Claudia's. Finally, I understand
her.
Understanding Pain
"Does it hurt?"
When I was growing up with spinal muscular atrophy, people often asked me that
question. Today, parents still ask, as they attempt to understand whether their
son or daughter with a new SMA diagnosis feels discomfort.
I reassure them that SMA, as a disease, doesn't "hurt." Sure, growing up, I
experienced the inevitable sprained ankles and muscle aches (my mom used to
call these "growing pains"), but there's no pain per se with this disease.
So why, then, do I, and many of my peers, have so much pain now, in middle age?
And where does this pain originate?
"Pain is one of the more enigmatic symptoms that all physicians confront, in one
form or another, every day," explained Michael P. McQuillen, professor of
neurology and medical humanities at the University of Rochester in New York.
"Since its origin may be multiple and varied, one has to start with the context
— character, origin, location, behavior, aggravating and ameliorating factors,
and the physical findings — to determine why the pain is there."
McQuillen said a number of conditions common in middle age, such as degenerative
joint disease or inflammatory conditions such as polymyalgia rheumatica, can
contribute to increased pain in those with neuromuscular disease. The loss of
limb movement over time can also contribute, he said.
I asked McQuillen, a former MDA clinic director in Wisconsin, about what I call
"nerve pain," or phantom pain. Be it throbbing, shooting, dull or burning,
almost every adult with neuromuscular disease I've spoken to seems to
experience this type of pain at times. As an example, I might feel that my foot
is pressed up against the bed sheets, accompanied by excruciating pain and
elevated blood pressure. But my caregiver assures me that nothing is touching
it, and after a short time the pain subsides.
McQuillen explained, "The neural basis of phantom pain is complex and poorly
understood. It probably has something to do with spontaneously activated
pathways at various levels of the central nervous system. It can be seen at
almost any age."
Greg Carter, clinical associate professor of rehabilitation medicine at the
University of Washington School of Medicine, offered some reasons for our pain.
"The first is simply biomechanical," he said. "People who have an imposed
mobility problem will often develop secondary musculoskeletal conditions that
can be painful. These include low back pain, frozen joints, stiff necks,
arthritic joints from walking abnormally or sitting in a wheelchair all day,
etc."
Mary E. Csuka, associate professor of medicine, Division of Rheumatology, at
Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital and the Medical College of Wisconsin, said
arthritic pain may be common in middle-aged people with muscle diseases.
Csuka, a specialist in geriatrics, osteoporosis, rheumatology and scleroderma,
pointed out that muscle is an important stabilizer to the joint. In people
without muscle problems, "even a joint with severe degeneration can remain
functional if the muscles can be strengthened."
However, she explained, "Patients with muscle-wasting diseases lose the
stability factor of normal muscle and, hence, the joint capsules and ligaments
are under greater strain even to maintain neutral position."
Immobility, by reducing blood supply to the cartilage of the bones, can also
contribute to the symptoms of aching and stiffness, she added.
Acknowledging Pain
Knowing all of this, you'd think we'd all be complaining to doctors about our
pain, yet this hardly seems the case. Wendy Peltier, assistant professor at the
Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee who serves as the MDA clinic director
there, reported, "Pain is actually not a frequent complaint."
Carter, co-director of MDA's clinics in Olympia and Tacoma, Wash., suggested
that the subject of pain may take a bit more prodding. Carter developed an
interest in chronic pain and the way it affects physical and emotional
functioning, so he started asking more neuromuscular disease patients if they
have pain. He was "amazed at how many said yes."
On the basis of his conversations with patients, Carter began doing pain
research on people with neuromuscular disease. He's working with psychologist
Mark P. Jensen, an associate professor in the University of Washington's
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine and a world-renowned expert on pain, and
Ted Abresch, director of research at the University of California at Davis in
the Neuromuscular Disease Research and Training Center.
I suggested to Carter that perhaps people with neuromuscular diseases are less
apt to complain about pain, because they believe it comes with being disabled —
just one more inconvenience or discomfort we must learn to accept.
"I absolutely agree," he responded, "and that is exactly why I think pain in NMD
has been overlooked for so long. The good news is that there are great, new,
effective physical and pharmaceutical ways to treat pain. Thus, I encourage
patients to talk to their health care providers about their pain."
Talking About It
Establishing a dialogue with your physician, along with obtaining a thorough
physical evaluation, will help determine the most effective treatment routes
for pain associated with neuromuscular disease. The complaints can be many and
varied: stiff joints from immobility, sore butt from sitting, pressure sores
from orthotics and so on. Identifying elements of your discomfort, such as
joint pain, is an essential start.
Sometimes pain diminishes when these problems are solved at the root — by
correcting the fit of a brace, adjusting positions more frequently or being
turned more often in the night. It's also important to treat pressure sores to
prevent major skin breakdown and infection, and to be ex-amined for possible
blood clots.
Your doctor may also recommend nonpharmaceutical treatments, including heat,
cold or massage. These techniques can actually change blood flow and reduce
inflammation. Some people have even found that psychological techniques, such
as meditation and relaxation exercises, can help to alleviate pain, or at least
relieve the tension that may be making pain worse.
But oftentimes, the "fix," that is, "Leave your brace off till your sores heal,"
or "Exercise more," isn't feasible. Psychological and mechanical treatments may
only go so far, and your doctor may agree that you need medication for the pain
(analgesics).
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as aspirin are the most
frequently prescribed for pain, but they can cause gastric problems in some
people. Csuka said she generally prescribes acetaminophen (Tylenol) for stiff,
inflamed joints. This is also the recommendation of the American College of
Rheumatology as the first medication to try for the treatment of
noninflammatory, or degenerative, arthritis pain. When compared to NSAIDs,
acetaminophen has been found both effective and safe. (See "Understanding
NSAIDs".)
She noted that Tylenol is available in a variety of forms, including syrup.
"Arthritis Strength Tylenol is formulated so that patients only need dosing
three times a day, rather than four times, when the medication is taken
regularly," Csuka said.
If you take acetaminophen regularly, you should be monitored for possible liver
toxicity, especially if you're also taking combination narcotic analgesics such
as acetaminophen and codeine phosphate (Tylenol 3), propoxyphene and
acetaminophen (Darvocet-N 100), hydrocodone bitartrate and acetaminophen
(Vicodin), or oxycodone hydrochloride and acetaminophen (Percocet).
I grew up with aspirin being the strongest pain pills in our family medicine
cabinet, so I asked Carter, "Is it just me, or do you find older neuromuscular
disease patients are especially resistant to trying pain medication, especially
narcotics?"
"Yes, indeed," he agreed. "That is why it is so important for the health care
provider to spend time talking to the patient, providing education about the
usefulness and side effects of pain medication.
"There is good evidence in the medical literature indicating that pain
medications are hugely underprescribed in the United States and people suffer
needlessly," Carter pointed out. "Plus, there are so many new, non-narcotic
types of pain relievers available."
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