Houston Chronicle

Alternativ­es to drugs for treating pain

- By Jane E. Brody | New York Times

Many years ago I was plagued with debilitati­ng headaches associated with a number of seemingly unrelated activities that included cooking for company and sewing drapes for the house. I thought I might be allergic to natural gas or certain fabrics until one day I realized that I tensed my facial muscles when I concentrat­ed intently on a project.

The cure was surprising­ly simple: I became aware of how my body was reacting and changed it through self-induced behavior modificati­on. I consciousl­y relaxed my muscles when I focused on a task that could precipitat­e a tension-induced headache.

Fast forward about five decades: Now it was my back that ached when I hurriedly cooked even a simple meal. And once again I realized that I was transferri­ng stress to the muscles of my back and had to learn to relax them and allow more time to complete a project to mitigate the stress. Happy to report, I recently prepared dinner for eight with nary a pain.

I don’t mean to suggest that every ache and pain can be cured by self-awareness and changing one’s behavior. But recent research has demonstrat­ed that the mind —along with other nonpharmac­ological remedies — can be powerful medicine to relieve many kinds of chronic or recurrent pains, especially low back pain.

As Dr. James Campbell, a neurosurge­on and pain specialist, put it, “The best treatment for pain is right under our noses.” He suggests not “catastroph­izing” — not assuming that the pain represents something disastrous.

Acute pain is nature’s warning signal that something is wrong that should be attended to. Chronic pain, however, is no longer a useful warning signal, yet it can lead to perpetual suffering if people remain afraid of it, the doctor said.

“If the pain is not an indication that something is seriously wrong, you can learn to live with it,” said Campbell, an emeritus professor at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutio­ns. Too often, he explained, “people with pain get caught in a vicious cycle of inactivity that results in lost muscle strength and further pain problems.”

Throwing powerful drugs at chronic pain problems may only add to the problem because ever higher doses are often needed. Knowing this, a growing cadre of specialist­s are exploring nondrug, noninvasiv­e treatments, some of which have proved highly effective in relieving chronic pain.

The American College of Physicians recently issued new nondrug guidelines for treating chronic or recurrent back pain, a condition that afflicts about one-quarter of adults at a cost to the country in excess of $100 billion a year.

Noting that most patients with back pain improve with time “regardless of treatment,” the college recommends such remedies as superficia­l heat, massage, acupunctur­e or, in some cases, spinal manipulati­on (chiropract­ic or osteopathi­c). For those with chronic back pain, the suggestion­s include exercise, rehabilita­tion, acupunctur­e, tai chi, yoga, progressiv­e relaxation, cognitive behavioral therapy and mindfulnes­sbased stress reduction.

Drug-free pain management is now a top priority among researcher­s at the National Center for Complement­ary and Integrativ­e Health, a division of the National Institutes of Health. A comprehens­ive summary of the effectiven­ess of nondrug treatments for common pain problems — back pain, fibromyalg­ia, severe headache, knee arthritis and neck pain — was published last year in Mayo Clinic Proceeding­s by Richard L. Nahin and colleagues at the center.

Based on evidence from well-designed clinical trials, the team reported that these complement­ary approaches “may help some patients manage their painful health conditions: acupunctur­e and yoga for back pain; acupunctur­e and tai chi for osteoarthr­itis of the knee; massage therapy for neck

pain with adequate doses and for short-term benefit; and relaxation techniques for severe headaches and migraine.”

Weaker evidence also suggested that massage therapy and spinal and osteopathi­c manipulati­on may be of some benefit to patients with back pain, and relaxation techniques and tai chi may help patients with fibromyalg­ia find relief.

Among the newest studies, conducted by Daniel C. Cherkin and colleagues at the Group Health Research Institute and the University of Washington in Seattle, both mindfulnes­s-based stress reduction and cognitive behavioral therapy proved more effective than “usual care” in relieving chronic low back pain and improving patients’ function.

Cognitive behavioral therapy, or CBT, in essence teaches people to restructur­e how they think about problems. “There was already evidence that CBT is effective for various pain conditions,” Cherkin said. “Our study showed that cognitive behavioral therapy and mindfulnes­sbased stress reduction were comparable in reducing dysfunctio­n and pain severity.”

In a follow-up study done two years later, patients treated with mindfulnes­s therapy or CBT remained more likely to be improved than those who received usual care, the team reported in February.

However, when it comes to accessing nondrug treatments for pain, there are two major problems. One is the failure of most health insurers to cover the cost of many if not all complement­ary methods and the practition­ers who administer them. When forced to pay out of pocket, many patients are likely to choose a drug remedy — despite its potential pitfalls — that insurance will cover.

Another challenge is availabili­ty. People residing in nonurban areas may be hard put to find a nearby therapist trained in cognitive behavioral therapy or mindfulnes­sbased stress reduction or even an expert massage therapist, tai chi teacher or acupunctur­ist.

 ?? Paul Rogers / New York Times ??
Paul Rogers / New York Times

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