Pubdate: Tue, 22 Jan 2002 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2002 San Jose Mercury News Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/390 Author: Jane E. Brody, New York Times Note: Jane Brody writes about health for the New York Times. MISUNDERSTOOD CLASS OF DRUGS CAN SOOTHE CHRONIC PAIN SAFELY Chronic pain suffered by 30 million Americans robs people of their dignity, personality, productivity and ability to enjoy life. It is the single most common reason people go to doctors. Yet chronic pain, whether caused by cancer or a host of non-malignant conditions, is seriously undertreated, largely because doctors are reluctant to prescribe -- and patients are reluctant to take -- the drugs that are best able to relieve persistent, debilitating, disabling pain that fails to respond to the usual treatments. These drugs are called opioids -- narcotics -- and many studies have indicated that ignorance and misunderstanding impede their appropriate use. "Some patients who experience sustained unrelieved pain suffer because pain changes who they are," wrote Dr. C. Richard Chapman of the University of Utah School of Medicine and Dr. Jonathan Gavrin of the University of Washington School of Medicine. Chronic pain, they wrote in the Lancet medical journal, results in "an extended and destructive stress response" characterized by brain hormone abnormalities, fatigue, mood disorders, muscle pain and impaired mental and physical performance. Neurochemical changes caused by persistent pain perpetuate the pain cycle by increasing a person's sensitivity to pain and by causing pain in areas of the body that would not ordinarily hurt. Dr. Jennifer P. Schneider, a specialist in addiction medicine and pain management in Tucson, Ariz., agrees. "When patients feel hopeless and think they will never get relief, it makes chronic pain and its effects that much worse," she said. Far too little has been done to correct the misunderstandings that stand in the way of using opioids to control chronic pain. Nowadays, doctors are more inclined to use narcotics for pain relief in patients with advanced cancer, assuming erroneously that "since they're dying anyway, it won't matter if they become addicts." But the reluctance to use opioids for non-cancer-pain patients persists, and patients are equally likely to resist taking them. "Like most doctors, most patients are relatively uninformed about the safety of using narcotics for pain, thinking they're dangerous drugs that will do bad things to them," Schneider explained. "They don't understand the difference between physical dependence and addiction, and as a result they're afraid they'll become addicts." In three studies involving nearly 25,000 patients treated with opioids who had no history of drug abuse, only seven cases of addiction resulted from the treatment. Physical dependence, whether to an opioid or to an immune-suppressing drug like prednisone, involves reversible changes in body tissues. To avert withdrawal symptoms, the medication must be stopped gradually. Addiction is mainly a psychological and behavioral disorder. Schneider described the hallmarks of addiction, whether to alcohol or narcotics, as loss of control over use, continuing use despite adverse consequences and obsession or preoccupation with the substance. Unlike an addict, whose life becomes increasingly constricted by an obsession with drug use, a patient using the drug for pain experiences an expansion of life when relief comes from this life-inhibiting disorder, Schneider said. An addict gets high by taking the drug in a way that rapidly increases the dose reaching the brain. But opioids properly used for pain do not result in a "rush" or euphoria. When given for chronic pain, opioids should provide a steady amount throughout the day. Nor do pain patients require ever-increasing amounts of opioids to achieve pain control, because patients in pain do not become "tolerant" to properly prescribed opioids. Higher doses are needed only if an inadequate amount of the drug is given in the first place or if the pain worsens. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager