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Chapter 8. Relieving Orthopedic Injury Pain. Pain or Injury?. Coaches ask if the distress is the result of torn tissue or simply in the athlete’s head. Torn tissue could be aggravated if athlete continues practice. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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© 2008 LWW
Chapter 8. Relieving Orthopedic Injury Pain
© 2008 LWW
Pain or Injury?• Coaches ask if the distress is the result of
torn tissue or simply in the athlete’s head.• Torn tissue could be aggravated if athlete
continues practice.• If pain is only in the athlete’s head, the
athlete could suck it up or gut it out.• Attend to her pain or return her to practice?
© 2008 LWW
Philosophy and Principles of Pain Relief
• Drugs, psychological techniques, surgical procedures, and physical therapy techniques result in varying degrees of success.
• No one method is consistently successful.
© 2008 LWW
Philosophy and Principles of Pain Relief (cont.)
• Successful clinicians are directed by a core philosophy.
• Principles are more important than tools.• Therapy is truly an art.
© 2008 LWW
Conditioning vs. Rehabilitation• Athletic success requires sacrifice.• Sometimes the athlete must ignore
discomfort—push through difficult challenges, push beyond previous best effort.
• Sometimes the athlete must persist in spite of pain—conditioning.
• Some types of injury pain must be ignored.
© 2008 LWW
Conditioning vs. Rehabilitation (cont.)
• Other types of injury pain cause neural inhibitions that decrease neuromuscular functioning—range of motion, strength, agility, etc.
• Persistent painful activity enhances neural inhibition.– Can become permanent physiological block
© 2008 LWW
Pain: Good or Bad?
• Demanding disciplinarian or benevolent benefactor?– Payback for pushing body beyond limits
(demanding disciplinarian)OR
– Protective mechanism to keep from causing further damage (benevolent benefactor)?
© 2008 LWW
Pain: Good or Bad? (cont.)• Both!• Body often mishandles pain.
– Great memory for what it wants to do but not for why it is doing it
– Pain often persists long after cause resolved• Must respect pain
– Use it to guide you.– But be tough on it when necessary, so it
doesn't take on a life of its own.
© 2008 LWW
No Pain No Gain?• During conditioning:
Yes!• During
rehabilitation: No! No! No!– Ignore the pain
equals no brain.– Pandering to pain
propagates pain.
© 2008 LWW
Ernst Dehne
• Father of modern orthopedic rehabilitation• Revolutionary thinking set stage for great
advances in rehabilitation during the past 30 years
• Ideas thought way out in the 1940s and 1950s
• Now standard thinking
© 2008 LWW
Dehne's Spinal Adaptation Syndrome
• Afferent nociceptive impulses from traumatized tissue alter the integration of central nervous excitation at the spinal cord.
– Decreased response to volitional stimuli– Increased response to otherwise subliminal peripheral
stresses• Results in involuntary muscle action• Alters repair• Responds adversely to additional stress,
favorably to reestablishment of central control
© 2008 LWW
In Essence• Nociceptive impulses from traumatized
tissue inhibit motor functions and tissue repair.
• Voluntary activity can reestablish CNS control and prevent this inhibition.
• Prolonged inactivity after an injury will lead to neural inhibition that may become permanent.
© 2008 LWW
Resetting Central Control during Rehabilitation
• Not enough to just get rid of the pain sensation
• Must also get rid of the effects of the pain– That is, reset the system (or reset central
control)
© 2008 LWW
Chicago Plane Analogy• A tire blowout occurs during takeoff.• The runway is shut down so the damaged plane and
debris can be removed.• The runway reopens after 6 hr (pain removed). • However, thousands of passengers are stranded
because of canceled flights (Chicago and elsewhere).• Meetings and business activities must be
rescheduled; hotel reservations and leisure activities must be changed.
• It may take months to fix the effects of the blown-out tire (reset central control).
© 2008 LWW
Example: Ankle Sprain in Gymnast
• After weeks of rehabilitation, the athlete is pain free while walking, has good muscular strength, but feels pain on dismount.
– Frustrated• We began a series of graded skill activities to reset central
control.– 50% speed, sit on horse– 75% speed, straddle horse, land without a flip– Repeat at 90% speed– 90% speed, simple flip over horse, land on mat– 90% speed, easiest vault that would score points
• All pain free• That evening at meet: normal warmup with limited vaulting
(repeat afternoon sequence)• Athlete scored a 9.2 and had no pain thereafter.
© 2008 LWW
Must Reset Central Control after Injury
• With prudent exercise
© 2008 LWW
Placebo and Pain Relief• Placebo: Latin for “I shall please”• Medically inactive substance given for its
suggestive effect• To satisfy patient’s demand for medicine• Often thought of as a mock intervention
(sugar pill)• Patient thinks he receives medicine.• Psychological effects of patient’s
expectations responsible for results.
© 2008 LWW
Placebo: Positive or Negative?
• Powerful influence on therapeutic interventions
© 2008 LWW
Placebo: Negative
• Quackery abounds.• Snake oil salesmen dupe the gullible into
thinking they have powerful medicine.
© 2008 LWW
Placebo: Positive• Half the strength of the true procedure in
double-blind studies• Placebo: relief to 35% of people with
postoperative pain, diabetes, chronic headache
• Ulcer patients – In one study
• 76% obtained relief with Tagamet• 63% obtained relief from placebo
© 2008 LWW
Placebo: Guide
• Don't use unproven treatments on gullible patients.
• Do maximize proven treatments on believing patients.
• When clinician and patient believe in treatment, high probability of successful outcome
© 2008 LWW
Placebo: Guide (cont.)
• Educate patient about the modality intervention.
• Be positive.• Set reachable goals.
© 2008 LWW
Mind Control (Psychological) Effects
• Same as placebo
© 2008 LWW
Pain and Rehabilitation
• Many tools to decrease pain– Immobilization– Therapeutic modalities– Cryotherapy – Exercise
© 2008 LWW
Pain and Rehabilitation (cont.)• Exercise should be relatively pain free.• Activity can be mildly uncomfortable; however, more
than this is a warning from the body that something is wrong.
• Do not evoke injury pain.• Pain must be monitored throughout the rehabilitation
process.• Pain during activity indicates the activity is too
strenuous or complex. • Residual pain, or pain the next day, indicates that the
previous day’s activity was too much,• Activities that result in pain during rehabilitation will
hinder the rehabilitation process by inducing neural inhibition.
© 2008 LWW
Sources of Athletic Injury Pain• Nociceptor stimulation• Relay impulse to spinal cord• Nociceptor is stimulated by
– Injured tissue (mediator release)– Edema pressure– Stretching injured tissue– Otherwise normal activity in a tissue that is
sensitized from disuse after injury
© 2008 LWW
Direct vs. Indirect Pain Relief
• Indirect: get rid of source of pain (reduce swelling)
• Direct: deal with pain itself (TENS to gate pain or release opioids)
© 2008 LWW
Use a Variety of Techniques• Change methods as necessary (the body sometimes
adapts to the treatment method, rendering it ineffective).
• Differences in patient response• Differences in injuryTools
– Therapeutic exercise– Counterirritants– Analgesic balm (Ben Gay, Icy Hot)– Ice packs
© 2008 LWW
Heat and Pain
• Effective for reducing general aches and pains
• Chronic pain
© 2008 LWW
Electricity and Pain
• Reduces muscle spasm• Releases endogenous opiates at pain
receptor sites• Stimulates nonpainful nerves to gate the
pain
© 2008 LWW
Cold and Pain
• Acute pain• Surgery (Allen et al., 1940s)
– Ice packs and immersion for 1–5 hr– Total analgesic for amputation
• Less postoperative pain medication• Immersion better than massage
© 2008 LWW
Cryotherapy
• Reduce pain to allow exercise– Joint sprains:
cryokinetics– Muscle spasm:
cryostretch