Read The Pain Chronicles Online

Authors: Melanie Thernstrom

Tags: #General, #Psychology, #History, #Nursing, #Medical, #Health & Fitness, #Personal Narratives, #Popular works, #Chronic Disease - psychology, #Pain Management, #pain, #Family & Health: General, #Chronic Disease, #Popular medicine & health, #Pain - psychology, #etiology, #Pain (Medical Aspects), #Chronic Disease - therapy, #Pain - therapy, #Pain - etiology, #Pain Medicine

The Pain Chronicles (39 page)

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pain four years after their surgery
: Esther Dajczman et al., “Long-Term Postthoracotomy Pain,”
Chest
99 (1991): 270–74.

study by Dr. Anna Taddio
: See Anna Taddio et al., “Effect of Neonatal Circumcision on Pain Response During Subsequent Routine Vaccination,”
The Lancet
349 (March 1, 1997): 599–603.

Botox
: See Andrew Blumenfeld et al., “The Emerging Role of Botulinum Toxin Type A in Headache Prevention,”
Operative Techniques in Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery
15 (June 2004): 90–96.

more troublesome side effects
: See I. M. Anderson, “Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors Versus Tricyclic Antidepressants; a Meta-analysis of Efficacy and Tolerability,”
Journal of Affective Disorders
58 (2000): 19–36.

According to a 2002 study
: See George Ostapowicz et al., “Results of a Prospective Study of Acute Liver Failure at 17 Tertiary Care Centers in the United States,”
Annals of Internal Medicine
137 (December 2002): 947–54.

as many as one-fourth of all patients
: See Jay L. Goldstein and Russell D. Brown, “NSAID-induced Ulcers,”
Current Treatment Options in Gastroenterology
3 (2000): 149–57.

6,000 to 7,500 Americans die
: See A. Lanas et al., “A Nationwide Study of Mortality Associated with Hospital Admission Due to Severe Gastrointestinal Events and Those Associated with Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drug Use,”
American Journal of Gastroenterology
(August 2005): 1685–93. These estimates were generated from Lanas’s statistics suggesting that the death rate attributed to NSAID/aspirin use was between 21.0 and 24.8 cases per million people, and then multiplying by the U.S. population.

Women report more frequent pain
: See L. LeReseche, “Gender Considerations in the Epidemiology of Chronic Pain,” in
Epidemiology of Pain
(Seattle: IASP Press, 1999), 43–52, or A. M. Unruh, “Gender Variations in Clinical Pain Experience,”
Pain
65 (1996): 123–67. Also K. J. Berkley, “Sex Differences in Pain,”
Behavioral Brain Science
20 (1997): 371–80.

2003 Norwegian study
: Anne Werner and Kirsti Malterud, “It’s Hard Work Behaving as a Credible Patient: Encounters Between Women with Chronic Pain and Their Doctors,”
Social Science & Medicine
57 (2003): 1409–19.

2005 Stanford University survey
: See “Broad Experience with Pain Sparks a Search for Relief,” ABC News/USA Today/Stanford University Medical Center Poll, May 9, 2005.

A 2008 survey
: See Charles B. Simone et al., “The Utilization of Pain Medications and the Attitudes of Breast Cancer Patients Toward Pain Intervention,” 2009 Breast Cancer Symposium.

“the paradox of patients’ satisfaction”
: See Ree Dawson et al., “Probing the Paradox of Patients’ Satisfaction with Inadequate Pain Management,”
Journal of Pain Symptom Management
23 (March 2002): 211–20.

single most important factor
: L. M. McCracken et al., “Assessment of Satisfaction with Treatment for Chronic Pain,”
Journal of Pain Symptom Management
14 (1997): 292–99.

2004 study at the University of Milan
: E. Vegni et al., “Stories from Doctors of Patients with Pain: A Qualitative Research of the Physicians’ Perspective”
Support Care Cancer
13 (2005): 18–25.

one-third and one-half
: See Thorsten Giesecke et al., “The Relationship Between Depression, Clinical Pain, and Experimental Pain in a Chronic Pain Cohort,”
Arthritis & Rheumatism
52 (2005): 1577–84 and studies discussed in Jeffrey Dersh et al., “Chronic Pain and Psychopathology: Research Findings and Considerations,”
Psychosomatic Medicine
64 (2002): 773–86.

Stanford University study of major depression
: Alan Schatzberg et al., “Using Chronic Pain to Predict Depressive Morbidity in the General Population,”
Archives of General Psychiatry
60 (2003): 39–47.

review study led by Dr. David A. Fishbain
: See D. A. Fishbain et al., “Chronic Pain Associated Depression: Antecedent or Consequence of Chronic Pain? A Review,”
Clinical Journal of Pain
13 (1997): 116–37.

a common genetic vulnerability
: See, for example, Dan Buskila, “Biology and Therapy of Fibromyalgia: Genetic Aspects of Fibromyalgia Syndrome,”
Arthritis Research & Therapy
8 (2006).

Brain imaging scans reveal similar disturbances
: Thorsten Giesecke et al., “The Relationship Between Depression, Clinical Pain, and Experimental Pain in a Chronic Pain Cohort,”
Arthritis & Rheumatism
52 (2005): 1577–84.

abnormalities in the neurotransmitters serotonin and norepinephrine
: See Matthew J. Bair, “Depression and Pain Comorbidity: A Literature Review,”
Archives of Internal Medicine
163 (2003): 2433–45.

depleting serotonin increases their pain responses
: See L. D. Lytle et al., “Effects of Long-term Corn Consumption on Brain Serotonin and the Response to Electric Shock,”
Science
190 (November 14, 1975): 692–94.

not above growing and selling
: See Jung Chang and Jon Halliday,
Mao: The Unknown Story
(New York: Knopf, 2005), 276.

“prolific in caresses and betrayals”
: See Charles-Pierre Baudelaire, “The Double Room,” in
Baudelaire in English
(New York: Penguin, 1998), 238.

2003 study led by Dr. Kathleen Foley
: See Kathleen Foley, “Opioids and Chronic Neuropathic Pain,”
New England Journal of Medicine
348 (2003): 1279–81 and M. C. Rowbotham et al., “Oral Opioid Therapy for Chronic Peripheral and Central Neuropathic Pain,”
New England Journal of Medicine
348 (2003): 1223–32.

slightly above 3 percent
: D. A. Fishbain et al., “What Percentage of Chronic Nonmalignant Pain Patients Exposed to Chronic Opioid Analgesic Therapy Develop Abuse/Addiction and/or Aberrant Drug-related Behaviors? A Structured Evidence-based Review,”
Pain Medicine
9 (2008): 444–59.

moral equivalent of inflicting pain
: See Morris,
The Culture of Pain
, 191. “The crucial point,” he writes, “beyond showing how fears of pain can destroy a person as effectively as cancer, is that
not
relieving pain brushes dangerously close to the act of willfully inflicting it.”

higher than 80 mg
: See Table 2 in “Interagency Guideline on Opioid Dosing for Chronic Non-Cancer Pain,” Washington State Agency Medical Directors’ Group, March 2007.

fifteen such specialists
: See “Pain Management Specialists Directory,” Washington State Agency Medical Directors’ Group, March 17, 2008.

action plan on OxyContin
: See “Action Plan to Prevent the Diversion and Abuse of Oxycontin,” Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Department of Justice, February 8, 2001.

Tina Rosenberg
: See Rosenberg’s excellent article, “When Is a Pain Doctor a Drug Pusher?”
New York Times Magazine
, June 17, 2007.

women are given psychotropic medications
: Cited in Jeffrey F. Peipert,
Primary Care for Women
, 2nd Edition (Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2004), 51.

“drug-seeking behavior”
: See R. Payne, “Sickle Cell–Related Pain: Perceptions of Medical Practitioners,”
Journal of Pain Symptom Management
14 (1997): 168–74.

2005 study
: See Ian Chen et al., “Racial Differences in Opioid Use for Chronic Nonmalignant Pain,”
Journal of General Internal Medicine
20 (July 2005): 593–98.

blacks as less compliant
: Michelle van Ryn and Jane Burke, “The Effect of Patient Race and Socio-economic Status on Physicians’ Perceptions of Patients,”
Social Science and Medicine
50 (March 2000): 813–26.

invisible hierarchy of pain sensitivity
: Pernick,
A Calculus of Suffering
, 157. Pernick details how theories of pain sensitivity were used in the decades after anesthesia’s discovery as a basis for prescribing appropriate doses.

Greek physician Galen
: Galen attributed pain to two disparate causes: dissolution of continuity in tissues, such as cuts or burns, or violent commotion in the humors. Harmony of the humors could be achieved through drugs or bloodletting and purgation.

“a subjective matter”
: Fülöp-Miller,
Triumph Over Pain
, 397.

“The savage does not feel pain as we do”
: Silas Weir Mitchell,
Characteristics
:
A Novel
(New York: The Century, 1913), 13.

Cesare Lombroso
: Cesare Lombroso,
Criminal Man
, ed. and trans. Mary Gibson, Nicole Hahn Rafter (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), 63, 69.

Slaves’ animal natures dulled them to pain
: God supported the social structure, Reverend Thomas Morong argued in his 1858 treatise
The Beneficence of Pain
, by endowing pain sensitivity according to circumstances—mitigating slaves’ lots with an extra capacity for endurance. See Pernick,
A Calculus of Suffering
, 156.

“will bear cutting”
: See Dr. James Johnson in
The Medico-Chirurgical Review and Journal of Medical Science
9 (Burgess and Hill, 1826): 620.

“the Negro . . . has a greater insensibility to pain”
: A. P. Merrill, “An Essay on Some of the Distinctive Peculiarities of the Negro Race,”
Southern Medical and Surgical Journal
7 (1856). Merrill writes:

But slaves are submissive, and effective laborers, under very different treatment [from being treated with a “spirit of kindness”]. They submit to and bear the infliction of the rod with a surprizing [
sic
] degree of resignation, and even cheerfulness; and indeed manifest in many cases a strong and unwavering attachment to the hand which inflicts the punishment, particularly if it be the hand of the owner, or some person who has the right to exercise government over them. They are a submissive and yielding race, wholly incapable of bearing malice on account of their degraded condition as slaves; and equally incapable of forming and maintaining, an effective and permanent organization among themselves, to assert their freedom, or to avenge their wrongs. They differ from their white masters in no one particular more than this. (pp. 35–56)

James Paget
: James Paget, “Experiments on Animals,” in
Selected Essays and Addresses
(New York: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1902), 338. This comment occurs in the context of a discussion of the justification of pain inflicted on animals based on utility to humans, evoking Pernick’s notion of a hierarchy of pain sensitivity.

Sims obtained several Alabama slaves
: See J. Marion Sims,
The Story of My Life
(New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1894), 222–46.

White children were subject to similar debate
: Educational theorists such as Horace Mann prescribed vigorous physical education as an antidote. See Horace Mann,
Lectures on Education
(Boston: Ide & Dutton, 1855), 313–14; Herbert Spencer,
Education: Intellectual, Physical, and Moral
(New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1901), 39; and Pernick,
A Calculus of Suffering,
152.

BOOK: The Pain Chronicles
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ads

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