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Archive for July 1st, 2009

Part One: Differentiating Addiction versus Pseudoaddiction for Effective Chronic Pain Management

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

This is part one of two on understanding Pseudoaddiction versus Addiction. There are many questions to be addressed when treating someone who has chronic pain and coexisting substance use disorders.  I start most of my Addiction-Free Pain Management® trainings with three questions:

1.  Are we managing pain but fueling the addiction?

2.  Are we treating the addiction but sabotaging the pain management?

3.  Is it addiction or pseudoaddiction?

The term pseudoaddiction is fairly new to the addiction treatment field but has been used in pain management for quite a while now.  I’ve worked with many patients who where labeled as prescription drug addicts when in fact it was pseudoaddiction.  One patient, Sharon is a great example of how damaging a misdiagnosis can be.  Sharon was in her early forties and came from a fairly normal and religious upbringing.  She had never used alcohol or any other drugs and up until a few years ago she had never used any psychoactive prescription medications either.

About three years ago Sharon began having infrequent migraine headaches.  She went to her general practitioner and was given Vicodin to help her cope.  This worked for her at the time, but we now know that she would have been better off on migraine specific medication.  Although barbiturates and opioids are sometimes considered effective for short-term migraine relief, many doctors recommend against prescribing them for long-term use because of the potential for dependence and abuse and the very real danger of developing medication overuse headaches (this is sometimes called pain rebound).

Sharon’s migraines started coming more frequently and she eventually needed to take more and more to get any relief.  As the dose increased her family and then her doctor became concerned that she had become “addicted” to the Vicodin.  Her doctor told her he couldn’t help her anymore unless she went into an addiction treatment program.  Her family found a program that advertised treating pain and prescription drug addiction.  That’s when Sharon’s nightmare began.  As she was detoxing from the Vicodin, the treatment center made her stand up in front of groups and identify herself as a drug addict.  They wouldn’t even let her say she was a prescription drug addict, which was humiliating for this very conservative woman. 

Unfortunately her migraines kept coming back after she was off all her medications.  To add insult to injury, when she asked for help they said she was just “drug seeking” and needed to “turn it over” and work the steps.  Even though I’m a big advocate of 12-Step support for people with addictive disorders, it can be dangerous for support groups, or treatment programs based in the 12-Step program to either label or advise chronic pain patients. 

Sharon was discharged from this program and with a letter to her doctor stating she was an addict and shouldn’t be given opiates anymore.  She became extremely depressed and near suicidal.  That’s when her family entered her into the pain clinic I was consulting for.  I met with Sharon several times and assessed her case.  I discovered her diagnosis never was an addictive disorder; she suffered from pseudoaddiction.

To better understand the importance of overcoming obstacles to effective chronic pain management please check out my article, Overcoming Obstacles for Effective Pain Management, that you can download for free on our Ariticles page.

You can learn more about the Addiction-Free Pain Management® System at our website www.addiction-free.com. If you or a loved one is undergoing chronic pain management, especially if you’re in recovery or believe you may have a medication or other mental health problem and you want to learn more effective chronic pain management tools, please go to our Publications page and check out my books; especially the Addiction-Free Pain Management® Recovery Guide: Managing Pain and Medication in Recovery. To purchase this book please Click Here.

To read the latest issue of Chronic Pain Solutions Newsletter please Click here. If you want to sign up for the newsletter, please Click here and input your name and email address. You will then recieve an autoresponse email that you need to reply to in order to finalize enrollment.


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