The severity and frequency of pain can differ among individuals. So doctors create pain management plans that are specific to each person.
Everyone experiences occasional aches and pains. Pain is the most common reason people seek medical care, according to the National Institutes of Health. But pain can be helpful in diagnosing a problem. Without pain, you might seriously hurt yourself without knowing it, or you might not realize you have a medical problem that needs treatment. Once you take care of the problem, pain usually goes away.
‘Medical treatments, lifestyle remedies, or a combination of these methods may be used to treat pain.’
"Sometimes we can easily pinpoint what is causing a person pain," says Richard Harris, Ph.D., associate professor of anesthesiology and rheumatology at Michigan Medicine. "But, there are still 1 in 5 Americans who suffer from persistent pain that is not easily identifiable." Whenever someone experiences pain, they often think about how intense the pain is -- but rarely do they also consider how widespread the pain is. Harris is the senior author on a new study, published in Pain, that sought to find what underlies widespread pain.
"We examined data from the brains of participants in the Multidisciplinary Approach to the Study of Chronic Pelvic Pain Research Network study," Harris says. "We compared participants with a clinical diagnosis of urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome to pain-free controls and to fibromyalgia patients."
Harris and colleagues examined if widespread pain, thought to be a marker of centralization in the nervous system, actually originates in the brain.
Functional and structural neuroimaging
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Researchers then had a subset of the participants undergo functional and structural MRIs.
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Urological chronic pelvic pain syndrome patients with widespread pain showed increased brain gray matter volume and functional connectivity involving the sensorimotor and insular cortices.
"What was surprising was these individuals with widespread pain, although they had the diagnosis of urological chronic pelvic pain, were actually identical to another chronic pain disorder: fibromyalgia," Harris says.
The team notes the changes in brain gray matter volume and functional connectivity were identical to outcomes present in fibromyalgia patients, but were not seen in the pain-free control group.
"This study represents the fact that pelvic pain patients, a subset of them, have characteristics of fibromyalgia," Harris says. "Not only do they have widespread pain, but also they have brain markers indistinguishable from fibromyalgia patients."
Harris and colleagues hope this study provides physicians with the opportunity to look at new ways of treating chronic pain patients -- as there might be similarities across pain conditions if both show widespread pain.
"We think that this type of study will help treat these patients because if they have a central nerve biological component to their disorder, they're much more likely to benefit from targets that affect the central nervous system rather than from treatments that are aimed at the pelvic region," Harris says.
Source-Eurekalert