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Mismanaged Pain Medication can Sabotage Your Chronic Pain Management Plan

There is quite a bit of confusion and mislabeling of people on long-term use of pain medication.  Many patients are identified as “addicts” when they really are not.  To help clarify this issue a consensus document was developed by the American Academy of Pain Medicine, the American Pain Society, and the American Society of Addiction Medicine.  They have agreed upon the following definitions for, tolerance, physical dependence, pseudo addiction and addiction:

Tolerance

Tolerance is a state of adaptation in which exposure to a drug induces changes that result in a diminution (lessening) of one or more of the drug’s effects over time.  To put it simply, tolerance means that it takes more medication to get the same level of pain relief.

Physical Dependence

Physical dependence is a state of adaptation that is manifested by a drug class specific withdrawal syndrome that can be produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose reduction, decreasing blood level of the drug, and/or administration of an antagonist (antagonist meaning blocking the usual effect of the medication).  The simple explanation is that if you stop taking some medications too quickly you will have significant withdrawal symptoms.

Pseudoaddiction

The term pseudoaddiction has developed over the past several years in an attempt to explain and understand how some chronic pain patients exhibit many red flags that look like addiction.  Pseudoaddiction is a term which has been used to describe patient behaviors that may occur when pain is under treated.  Patients with unrelieved pain may become focused on obtaining medications, may clock watch, and may otherwise seem inappropriately drug seeking.  Even such behaviors as illicit drug use and deception can occur in the patient’s efforts to obtain relief.  Pseudoaddiction can be distinguished from true addiction in that the behaviors resolve when the pain is effectively treated.

Addiction

Addiction is a primary, chronic, neurobiological disease, with genetic, psychosocial, and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations.  It is characterized by behaviors that include one or more of the following: impaired control over drug use, compulsive use, continued use despite harm, and craving.

Over-Medicating and Under-Medicating

Learn How To Make Healthier Pain Medication Decisions

Many people in chronic pain are afraid to take their opiate pain medication because they have heard horror stories of people getting hooked on pain pills.  This leads to a decision to under-medicate and then they end up suffering as a result.  On the other hand not taking effective precautions could lead to developing an addictive disorder.  If you happen to be in recovery for alcoholism or another drug addiction the problem is even worse.  If you under-medicate it could trigger a relapse.  Of course the other side of the coin is overmedication; which could lead to rapid tolerance building and finally reactivation of an existing addictive disorder that was in remission.

To learn more go to our Publications page and check out my Addiction-Free Pain Management® Module Two: Examining Your Potential Medication Management Problems.  To purchase this module please Click Here.

You can learn more about the Addiction-Free Pain Management® System at our website www.addiction-free.com.  We have a busy fall schedule for upcoming trainings that you can check out on our Calendar page.

To listen to a recent radio interview I did conducted by Mary Woods for her program One Hour at a Time please Click Here to go to this interview.

To read the September Issues 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. 

3 Responses to “Mismanaged Pain Medication can Sabotage Your Chronic Pain Management Plan”

  1. colleen olson Says:

    i wanted to thank you for being so intelligent. and writing these explanations. i am on oxy contin have been for about 5 yrs npw. and the way things r looking ..will be for the rest of my life. and my family and friends look at me as an addict not a “Pseudoaddiction*. i have tried other ,methods (withing myfinancial and ins policy limits) and these meds help to have some kind of a life!!!. the only issue i have is my system is bulding up a to;erance to the current dosage. i try to go w/o the meds to help my to;erance but cannot handle the withdrawals and the pain !!!again just wanted to say thank you for all this good information and your “time”. god bless you

  2. admin Says:

    Hi Colleen,
    Thank you for your kind comments. I hope you continue to be open-minded about looking for more pain management tools in addition to your medication. Please feel free to download any of my articles that may have some helpful tools for you. One is called “Coping with Anticipatory Pain” that many of my patients find helpful.
    Best regards,
    Dr. Stephen F. Grinstead

  3. Michael the Archangel Says:

    This message of the dangers of undermedicating people in continuously excruciating pain. The other noted how we simply want to level out and have some kind of reliable defense against our suffering, and yes, maybe even do some of the things we could do when we were well. That’s all I want but doctors seem always to have a corporate chart that determines my medicine i.e. condition, weight, age etc. (currently) or just a liking for a certain medicine/arrangement of medicines.
    In response to others who have ab-used the system, I cannot find a Dr. who will provide professional, detailed & factual, scientific care for me. They don’t want involved and offer you a take-it-or-leave-it option! You’re a problem if their solution isn’t working!
    Anyway, can you send me/post information on how to talk to your doctor if being undermedicated has ravaged your life under his care? I’m thankful to have some care and can’t jeapordize that- but I need to find someone who listens and takes me seriously, in compassion.

    KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!!

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