« PREP Gathering of Students, Alumni and Faculty | Main | Welcome to the Pain Research, Education & Policy Blog »

Is Pain a Disease or a Symptom?

by Ylisabyth (Libby) Bradshaw, D.O., M.S.,FACEP, Academic Director of the Pain Research, Education and Policy program at Tufts University School of Medicine

Does it matter whether pain is a disease or a symptom?

For people living and suffering with pain, such a question may seem irrelevant. Perhaps like splitting hairs.

“Just make the pain better.”
“I don’t care what category you put it in!”
“Don’t just talk about it. Do something! Anything to relieve this agony.”

Why would it matter whether and how medical professionals want to categorize pain?
Symptoms are defined as subjective experience; diseases are defined in objective terms, with specified causes, or associated signs and symptoms.

People with pain certainly have a personal, internal experience of pain. And, aside from asking a person to describe and rank the intensity of their own pain, there’s no medical test for determining the type of pain or its severity.

The predominant medical view for centuries has been that pain is a symptom, and viewed as an entirely subjective experience by an individual. Physiologically, pain has been seen as simply the transmission through nerves of information about damage or potential damage to parts of the body.

After all, when pain is caused by something inside the body - a ruptured disk, nerve disease, or compression from an expanding tumor - it seems that something is irritating or pressing on a nerve, which is then communicated, allowing us to feel pain. Pain is a classic symptom, it would seem.

And pain could hardly be expected to be a disease when it’s caused by forces from outside the body - a fall, an automobile crash, or even surgery; it seems completely straightforward - and easy to understand when nerves are compressed, crushed, or cut - pain is the symptom.

Yet, accumulating evidence in neuroscience says pain is more complicated. No matter what initiates pain - from traumatic forces to specific neurological disorders - if conditions continue, and the pain signal is maintained, specific bodily changes occur.

Measurable now in research labs, such characteristic, physiological alterations, arising from actively transmitting information about pain, can unfortunately become sustained biochemical changes. Ordinarily, our bodies reverse this process when the initial circumstances causing pain are relieved. Yet, too often these changes become irreversible, and permanent, resulting in chronic pain.

Two imperfect examples from our material world - Once cement is mixed and sets up, it becomes a new substance. Once glue is used, it can bind to a substance, and be impossible to remove. The science of pain is still discovering answers, and resolving uncertainties. OK, our brains and nerves are not comparable to cement, glue, or jello. Yet it is clear, signals about definite or potential tissue injury turn on many biochemical processes that transmit information about pain through our nerves. Over time, these can become irreversible changes. Pain, then, is beyond being merely a symptom.

Please join this initial discussion on the Pain Research, Education and Policy blog at Tufts University School of Medicine, and include your thoughts regarding, “Is pain a symptom or a disease?”

If pain is more than a symptom, does that make it a disease?

Common definitions of “disease” include impaired functioning*. From your knowledge and experience, how do pain conditions have impaired functioning?

We look forward to interesting exchanges from students, faculty, practitioners, alumni and members of the general public committed to improving the conditions treatment and prevention of individuals across all ages with acute and chronic pain problems.

* Disease - “a condition of the living animal …[or one of its parts] that impairs normal functioning and is typically manifested by distinguishing signs and symptoms” MeriamWebster

“an impairment of the normal state of the living animal … or one of its parts that interrupts or modifies the performance of the vital functions, [and] is typically manifested by distinguishing signs and symptoms…” Medline

Comments (5)

Sherry Brink:

With my 30+ years of nursing behind me I still think of pain as a symptom. I believe science has not always come up with the answer as to what the disease or cause of the pain is. As we become more educated on the intricacies of the brain and the neuro system the causes may become more clear to us. These are exciting times as neuro imaging becomes more exact providing clues that were was unseen. i look forward to the unravelings of this complicated system and improve the lives of those living with pain.

Sharon Sorensen:

Good Question. Unfortunately I have found- from being in chronic pain myself- Practitioners tend toward the limited view- one or the other. As the years have gone by and my pain has sustained, yet changed, I have realized that, for myself- I have the symptomatology of both a mechanical presentation- so classic- combined with an area of my spine where the nerves are diseased- i.e. a disordered or incorrectly functioning organ due to past and chronic damage. Medical Support for me has been limited. Differential diagnosis is a lost art in the medical community.

Denver:

Most people who have been diagnosed with chronic depression and anxiety have probably been prescribed modern anti-depression and anxiety medications such as Prozac, Celexa, Zoloft, Paxil and other SSRI related medications which seem to be the favorite choice of every modern doctor of the 21st century, this indicates findrxonline in his article about depression. Unfortunately these new anti-anxiety and depression medications do not come without side effects and only a small percentage of its users reports that these medications do indeed balance their moods to the point where they can say they truly feel comfortable over longer periods of time.

Very nice site! cheap viagra

Very nice site!

Post a comment

tufts_logo.gif

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 22, 2009 3:06 PM.

The previous post in this blog was PREP Gathering of Students, Alumni and Faculty .

The next post in this blog is Welcome to the Pain Research, Education & Policy Blog.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

A service of University Information Technology (UIT)—Academic Technology