The Welland Tribune

Nonopioids can offer effective pain relief

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Dear Mayo Clinic: If opioids are such a problem, why are they used so often to treat pain? Aren’t there other options for controllin­g pain that aren’t as risky?

A: Pain is a common medical problem, and opioids are often used to combat it because they can be very effective at relieving pain for a short period of time. However, you are correct that taking opioids poses significan­t risks, including addiction and overdose. Alternativ­es to opioids are available, and it’s wise for people who need pain relief to seriously consider using nonopioid options when possible.

Opioids are powerful painkiller­s. Commonly prescribed opioid medication­s include oxycodone, morphine, hydromorph­one, oxymorphon­e, hydrocodon­e, fentanyl, meperidine, codeine and methadone.

These medication­s often are used in hospitals to combat pain after surgery or to ease pain after a traumatic injury. Opioids also can be the most effective treatment for severe ongoing pain, such as pain caused by cancer. But other uses of opioids are increasing, too. Estimates are that 50 million Americans suffer from chronic pain. Many turn to opioid painkiller­s for relief. Opioid prescripti­ons for chronic noncancer pain have doubled in the last decade.

In cases of serious cancer pain, the likelihood of becoming addicted to opioids over time is low. In many other situations, however, addiction to and overdose of opioids is a very real concern. Overdosing on opioids triggers low blood pressure, a slow rate of breathing and the potential for breathing to stop, as well as the possibilit­y of a coma. Opioid overdose has a significan­t risk of death. In fact, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 115 Americans die, on average, every day from an opioid overdose.

In addition to these risks, using opioids for more than a short time needs to be viewed with caution because little evidence is available to support its effectiven­ess over time for noncancer pain. People with chronic pain who take opioids typically need higher doses over time to achieve the same level of pain control, leading to an increased risk of dependence, addiction, overdose and reduced quality of life. Some research also has shown that long-term opioid use may actually make people more sensitive to pain — a condition called opioid-induced hyperalges­ia.

A range of alternativ­es to opioid medication­s exists for managing chronic pain. They include other pain-relieving medication­s that don’t contain opioids, such as acetaminop­hen, and nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drugs including naproxen sodium, ibuprofen and Aspirin.

Physical and occupation­al therapy, stress management, relaxation techniques, acupunctur­e and biofeedbac­k all have been shown to have a positive effect on chronic pain, too. Incorporat­ing cognitive behavioura­l therapy, in which a therapist works with patients to learn more effective, positive ways to cope with chronic pain, also has been shown to be useful in dealing with pain.

Many health care organizati­ons, including Mayo Clinic, offer pain rehabilita­tion programs that help people taper off opioid pain medication­s while learning about these and other pain-management techniques.

Nonopioid approaches to managing chronic pain not only eliminate the risks of addiction and overdose, in many cases, they also offer more effective pain relief that lasts longer and allows people to maintain a higher quality of life than is possible with ongoing opioid use.

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