Evaluation of the Chronic Pain Patient



Evaluation of the Chronic Pain Patient


Gordon Irving

Pamela Squire



Introduction

Pain, as every textbook will report, is a warning system designed to protect our bodies from injury. To do this well, we must be able to determine the site of pain, its intensity, its meaning, and how much it should bother us.

All pain has four dimensions:



  • The sensory experience (what it feels like)


  • The cognitive experience (what it means)


  • The affective experience (how much it bothers you)


  • Autonomic activation (rapid heart rate, elevated blood pressure)

When we ask people to rate their pain, most patients will understand this as a rating for the first dimension alone. This is of course what most clinicians are after and document. But, how can patients separate these dimensions to rate only one part?

The role of a pain assessment is to sort out the different contributors to each dimension and their relative importance in affecting the functional impact of pain in each individual. This assessment should then direct treatment recommendations for each individual.

Consider this scenario. On a particularly bad Friday, a physician discovers that he has been suspended from practice following a college review. (He does not recall this review but opened the letter late on Friday, too late to call the college for details!) Distracted while driving home, he is involved in an accident and discovers his car insurance has lapsed. Distraught, he arrives home, in a taxi, and hears a family argument in the kitchen. Walking up the steps, he stubs his toe, and it bleeds. At that moment, his partner opens the door, notices the hopping behavior and the blood and asks, “Where would you rate your pain between 0 and 10?” The clinician, still hopping, shouts, “15 out of 10!!!!”

Later, in a calmer environment, he finds out his partner had renewed his auto insurance but had left the papers at home. On Monday, he finds out the college letter was meant to go another provider of the same name, and on Tuesday, he wins the local lottery, more than enough to retire on. That Friday, while walking up the steps of the theater to pick up the ceremonial lottery check, he again stubs his toe and it bleeds. His partner notices this and again asks, “Where would you rate your pain between 0 and 10?” The clinician, beaming, strides unbroken murmurs, “What pain?” and proceeds to center stage.

In both of these scenarios, the injury is both acute and identical, but the pain ratings are not. What then is the clinician rating?

He is rating primarily how much the pain bothered him, not what it meant or the stimulus intensity.

In a different scenario, a young women with a history of a slow growing tumor waits in the reception area for the results of her magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to find out if her recent back pain is due to tumor recurrence. When completing the assessment forms that morning, she rated her back pain, then present for a month, at 8/10. One hour later, at the end of a consult which showed no recurrence of her tumor, she now rates her back pain at 4/10.

What was she rating? The sensory experience? Or perhaps the rating and the reduction more accurately reflected the cognitive component of the pain, what it meant to her.

Identifying each of these dimensions and the role they play in any individual’s total pain forms the basic “layers” of an initial chronic pain assessment. Each layer will have important contributors, and this chapter attempts to provide an outline to assist the clinician or team perform an accurate and detailed assessment.

In addition to identifying each dimension of the pain experience, the clinician is expected to also identify the layers of each dimension. For example, with regard to the pain stimulus, research suggests that it is important not just to make a diagnosis but to identify individual pain mechanisms.


Is the pain of chronic knee arthritis nociceptive, neuropathic, centrally driven, or a combination?

Is the pain local, segmental, or regional or widespread?

Is the location of the pain due to abnormalities in the tissues, nerve terminals, nerve transmission, the dorsal root ganglion, dorsal horn, midbrain, cortex or forebrain, or several of these areas?

As a result of the location of the pain and the mechanisms involved, what does the patient report and what can we find on examination? Provoked or unprovoked pain? Muscle spasm, weakness, tremors, or reduced range of motion? Sensory changes of small fibers (changes to thermal stimuli or pinprick) or changes of central pain processing (widespread pain, light touch allodynia, cold hyperalgesia, or pressure allodynia.)?

Assessing for layers of the affective component of the pain means asking about adverse childhood events and current stressors and screening for anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), addiction, and others. Are patients having problems with motivation, insomnia, difficulties with memory, and focus?

Assessing for layers of the cognitive component means looking for pain beliefs. The two commonest beliefs to be assessed are the tendency to catastrophize and to experience fear of movement. Perceived injustice is another construct that seeks to look at the effect on an individual when he or she experiences chronic pain as a result of, or the perception of, another’s error or negligence. If these “cognitive distortions” are present, how have they affected the patient? Do they have limited coping skills, deconditioning, or other problems?







FIGURE 17.1 The multidimensional layers of chronic pain. Although this may identify the individual factors contributing to the overall pain experience, treatment will depend on the amount that each “layer” contributes to the loss of function. In certain patients, additional layers including the contribution of genetics or the role of additional diseases such as Parkinson will be relevant. (Image courtesy of Dr. Atul Khullar, 2013.)

Creating an individual “layer cake” for each patient fosters a very different approach that removes the focus from the pain and provides an image of potential treatment opportunities (Figs. 17.1 and 17.2).

In a traditional biologic model of pain, the pain is proportional to the tissue injury. In persistent pain, this linear relationship is often lost, and the patient may be labeled with pain out of proportion to physical findings. Under certain circumstances, this may be associated with malingering (a legal not a medical diagnosis) or secondary gain, but for most patients, this simply represents a clinician’s inability to identify all of the layers contributing to the total pain.

The overall effect of persistent pain is a result of a complex interplay between the pain itself, other comorbidities, physical, psychiatric, and psychological as well as psychosocial factors such as support from significant others, financial factors, and job stability. Failure to identify and address these factors may lead to mutual frustration between the patient and the health care provider and poor therapeutic results.






FIGURE 17.2 Five examples of patients with chronic knee pain and pain scores of 8/10. Determining the degree of contribution of each factor contributing to pain would dictate very different treatment recommendations for each of these patients. (Image courtesy of Dr. Atul Khullar, 2013.)

For example, patients with kinesophobia fears moving because they believe the pain with movement is causing additional tissue damage. This leads to progressive physical deactivation and pain exacerbation with further loss of function. This can lead to feelings of unworthiness and poor self-esteem.1 If this affects their ability to work and leads to financial stress, this can exacerbate anxiety and depression. Compounding these issues, the medications themselves may be a cause of fatigue and debility.

In today’s health care environment, time to evaluate complex pain patients is limited. Where appropriate, this chapter suggests time-saving, self-assessment, nonproprietary questionnaires that can help a clinician to know where to perform a more detailed evaluation now or later.

Response to therapy should be gauged more by functional improvement than by a decrease in the pain score. The patient’s trust in the health care provider is important. Patients should feel that they have been listened to, their fears have been acknowledged, and the provider is “there for them.” People will forget what you said and forget what you did but never forget how you make them feel. This latter statement does not imply the practitioner has to feel the suffering of the patient. The practitioner should remain empathetic and compassionate to the patient’s issues while trying to remain emotionally resilient.

The examination of the patient presenting with the various specific persistent pain syndromes is not addressed in this chapter. These are described in the chapters allotted to those problems. This chapter addresses some of the practical problems of assessing the patient with persistent pain so that treatment can be individualized. Some tools are provided that may assist the clinician and are included as appendices.

The appendices include the following:



  • Example of an initial history questionnaire to be completed by the patient


  • Colored pain diagram


  • Goal setting information for the patient


  • Example of a follow-up progress questionnaire to be completed by the patient


GENERAL GUIDELINES FOR ASSESSMENT OF PERSISTENT PAIN

Guidelines summary



  • Consider using the term persistent pain.


  • Persistent pain is complex and needs devoted time for the initial assessment and plan.



  • Initial and follow-up pain questionnaires are important.


  • Having a significant other accompanying the patient can be invaluable.


  • Identifying goals of therapy is a difficult but important part of the assessment.

The assessment and treatment of a patient with ongoing chronic pain begins with the recognition that a complete pain cure is unlikely. Consider changing the name of the problem to persistent pain, which may have less of a pejorative meaning to the patient. The best long-term results are achieved by utilizing approaches that involve both the available community resources as well as the patient becoming more engaged in his or her own therapy. Involvement by the patient in decisionmaking and goal setting is important. Improving the patient’s physical and mental functioning is the ultimate goal.

The time allotted to each patient depends on the type of practice. A pain specialist may allot 40 to 90 minutes to assess a new patient; the busy primary care practitioner may only have 15 to 20 minutes. Alternatively, the assessment can be divided, and information can be completed over several different visits.

An initial comprehensive questionnaire can be sent to the patient via the post or via an e-mail link prior to the consultation (see Appendix 17.1 as an example). If using an online questionnaire that is returned via e-mail, care should be taken to ensure it fulfills the health privacy regulations of the country.

Asking the patient to arrive 20 to 30 minutes early prior to the initial appointment enables any relevant paperwork and insurance verification, if necessary, to take place. It also gives time for the patient to complete the questionnaire, if not already done; have their blood pressure, etc., taken; and have a urine specimen collected for toxicology screening, if appropriate.

A companion, preferably a significant other, should accompany the patient when possible for the initial evaluation and when optimizing or initiating new therapies. By having this individual sit at the patient’s side, much information can be gathered about the couple’s relationship by body language as well as by visual and verbal expression. The companion may also contradict, or confirm, whether a therapy is working, either verbally or by gesture. As much of the therapeutic discussion is often missed by the patient, no matter how attentive he or she appears to be, having a second person there listening may help.


Outline of a Multidimensional Assessment Questionnaire for Persistent Pain History

It is important to assess the following:



  • The pain history


  • Medical and surgical history


  • Mood


  • Psychosocial comorbidities


  • Sleep


  • Cognitive impairment


  • Vocational history and current disability


  • Habits


  • Risk of opioid misuse, abuse, or dependence


  • Function


  • Current and past treatments


  • Current and past medications and supplements


  • Allergies


  • Previous investigations and consultations


  • Goals


  • Physical examination

Questionnaires used should ideally be



  • Validated


  • Simple and rapid to complete


  • Valuable in identifying the problem and best therapy


  • Allow functional outcomes to be followed


  • Able to show health care benefits across a system and “follow” the patient between specialties

Davidson et al.2 suggested that seven factors accounted for 59% of the total variance in outcomes of pain treatment. These were pain and disability, pain description, affective distress, support, positive coping strategies, negative coping strategies, and activity. A pain assessment should try to capture most of these factors.

Different practices will require different levels of questionnaire. Solo practitioners may differ in their need to validate their role in a health care organization. Other considerations are whether the questionnaire is proprietary, meaning its use for research in large organizations or in digital format on the web will need to be licensed. In the examples discussed in this chapter, most questionnaires are nonproprietary or available to be used freely. Most questionnaires may be used for individual practices and in paper format without licensing, as long as they are not going to be used in publications.

The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) initiative was a National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded program to develop new ways to measure patient-reported outcomes (PROs), such as pain, fatigue, physical functioning, emotional distress, and social role participation. PROMIS has also created a psychometrically robust computer adaptive testing (CAT) system based on item response theory (IRT) to administer these items. Whether administered through the CAT system, or by paper version short forms, PROMIS questionnaires have been validated and have shown equal or even improved in efficiency and sensitivity in comparison with existing PROs (https://commonfund.nih.gov/promis/index).


SUMMARY OF SOME NONPROPRIETARY QUESTIONNAIRES


Depression: (Patient Health Questionnaire [PHQ] 2, PHQ 9, PROMIS Short Form Emotional Distress-Depression)

Anxiety: (General Anxiety Disorder [GAD] 7, GAD 2, PROMIS Short Form Emotional Distress-Anxiety)

Sleep: (STOP-Bang for sleep apnea, difficulty falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep; URGES for restless leg syndrome; PROMIS Short Form Sleep)

Mood: Interference with enjoyment of life, PROMIS Short Form

Function: Brief Pain Inventory, PEG, Interference with general activity, STarT Back, PROMIS Short Forms of Physical function, Pain Interference, Fatigue, Pain Behavior, Applied Cognition-Abilities, Global Health

Substance abuse: Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), PROMIS Short Form Alcohol Use

Opioid abuse: Opioid Risk Tool (ORT)


OTHER POTENTIALLY USEFUL QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER FOR GAUGING EFFECTIVENESS OF THERAPY


Difficulty with a specific activity, chosen by the patient

Goal identification and follow-up


SUMMARY OF PROPRIETARY QUESTIONNAIRES TO CONSIDER


Pain Catastrophization Scale—pain catastrophizing

Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK)—fear of movement

Screener and Opioid Assessment for Patients with Pain (SOAPP14)

Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM)

Screening Instrument for Substance Abuse Potential (SISAP)3 CAGE-AID—screening tool to assess for risk of serious alcohol or drug problems

The following format for documentation of an initial multidimensional pain assessment is suggested. It encompasses the various dimensions of pain and should facilitate communication with other members of the health care team.







FIGURE 17.3 A pain diagram illustrates a patient with complex regional pain syndrome of the right shoulder and hand and myofascial pain in the left shoulder.

An excellent summary of measures to assess psychological, physical, emotional functioning, and disability as well as attitudes, beliefs, and coping are discussed by Turk et al.4


The Pain History

The history of each pain condition provides important clues to the underlying etiology and the chronicity of each condition. It is important to document the etiologies of all the patient’s pain diagnoses. The mechanism, if known, date of onset, overall severity, and factors that worsen or improve pain should be noted. It can be formally done during an interview by having a patient-completed history form. For children, or patients with cognitive impairment, a caregiver should be present to provide additional information.

A pain diagram can often provide a “quick look” picture and, when colored ones are used, can help to determine potential areas of neuropathic pain (see Appendix 17.4 or Fig. 17.3 as examples).


Summary and suggested questionnaires

O = Onset

P = Provocative/palliative

Q = Quality/character (Does it have neuropathic features?)

Colored pain diagram

McGill Pain Questionnaire Short Form

R = Region/radiation

Body diagram with shading or colors

S = Severity/intensity

Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)

Graded Chronic Pain Rating Scale

T = Timing of pain (Continuous or intermittent?)


O: ONSET OF PAIN

How pain began is often informative. In many cases, the initial acute cause of the pain may identify an understandable etiology. In other cases, there may not be an obvious organic initiating cause. In these cases, the practitioner has to be careful not to automatically ascribe the pain to psychogenic causes but to accept the patient’s description.


P: PROVOCATIVE/PALLIATIVE

Assessing what provokes or relieves the pain provides valuable clues to the diagnosis and treatment. Leg and back pain due to spinal stenosis has a characteristic pattern of worsening with walking or standing, with the pain being totally relieved with sitting or lying for a short time. Neuropathic pain can present with spontaneous pain or pain provoked by different stimuli such as cold, light touch, or the brushing of bedsheets. It is often improved with heat and worsened by cold, the opposite of inflammatory pain.


Q: QUALITY OR CHARACTER

Neuropathic pain is often described as burning, deep aching, shock-like, or shooting. Other associated sensations include numbness, tingling, pins, and needles. Patients may describe unusual sensations like cold water running down a leg or the feeling that they are walking on marbles. Patients with neuropathic pain may also have associated autonomic nervous symptoms including sweating, skin color, and temperature. Changes in hair and nail growth or swelling may also be present. The latter may be intermittent and not evident on the day of examination. They may be documented by photographs, as many patients now have a smartphone with a digital camera.

There are several neuropathic pain questionnaires which assess self-reported symptoms such as dysesthesias, electric shock-like qualities, numbness, temperature sensitivity, and allodynia. As many nonneuropathic pain syndromes may elicit positive responses, Mathieson et al. comment that these tools “should not replace a thorough clinical assessment.”7


R: REGION/RADIATION

The different sites of pain and radiation patterns can be visually represented by having the patient draw the pain on a pain diagram. Neuropathic characteristics can be represented at the
same time by using symbols or colors such as red for burning, green for tingling, and blue for numbness. Specific drawings for the head and face can be used to capture headache and orofacial pain (Fig. 17.4).






FIGURE 17.4 The pain diagram of a patient with bilateral peripheral neuropathy.


S: SEVERITY/INTENSITY OF PAIN

The NRS is the most commonly used method as it is easy to administer. It has been shown to have a higher compliance and ease of use than the Visual Analog Scale (VAS).6 The scale is from 0 = no pain to 10 = worst pain imaginable or worst possible pain. In children and those with limited cognitive ability, the Faces Pain Scale should be considered. The time scale varies from the last 24 hours to the last week. The Graded Chronic Pain Scale which asks the worst, least, and average pain over the same period of time can give an idea of the patient’s overall burden of pain.

Many physicians have difficulty when patients rate their pain score with a number that seems to be at odds with their demeanor and functionality. Acknowledging to the patient that you believe he or she must have significant pain and then offering further anchors to the scale often results in a different rating that may be more meaningful in follow-up. The following script may be helpful to consider in a patient who has rated the pain as 15/10:


“I believe you have pain that is severe, and it is obviously very distressing to you, but I am not quite sure how to interpret your rating because I do need a number between 0 and 10. If I say 0 means absolutely no pain and 10 out of 10 pain would be severe burns to most of your body or the pain you would feel if your hand was caught in a meat grinder, where would you rate your pain?”

A patient who initially described the pain as 15/10 will often adjust the rating when belief, acknowledgment, and new anchors are provided. Remember, not all patients are able to separate the pain intensity from how much it bothers them and what it means.


T: TIMING OF PAIN

The timing of pain can provide diagnostic clues to pain etiology. Neuropathic pain is often spontaneous. Patients report episodes of severe pain without any provocation, although nociceptive pain, such as osteoarthritis of the hip, is usually not severe unless provoked by use. The typical timing of cluster headaches differentiates it from the ice-pick headache. The intermittent nature of trigeminal neuralgia would differentiate it from atypical facial pain.


ALTERED PERCEPTION

Many patients with persistent pain experience altered body perceptions. Hemi-attention (to both the affected, especially left-sided, body parts with associated mood change like depression) and hemi-neglect have been described in patients with some chronic musculoskeletal pain such as chronic low back pain and after limb amputation.7

Patients with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) may have subtle motor abnormalities. They may volunteer weakness but not mention tremor, dystonia, or motor incoordination unless specifically asked. They often have body perceptual distortions which are often not spontaneously reported. CRPS patients may feel like the affected limb does not belong to them and may want to amputate it because it feels alien. Ask how they feel emotionally about their limb, if it feels alien to them, and how aware they are of the physical position of the affected part. Consider asking them to close their eyes and describe how each affected part feels to them and draw it. In an affected foot, the calf may feel normal, but the foot feels larger and the toes may not be distinct compared to the other side.

Questionnaires to consider: Widely used multiple-item questionnaires with a high reliability and validity include the McGill Pain questionnaire which has two validated short forms. These yield subscales which can assist in distinguishing between different types of clinical pain.8


Past Medical and Surgical History

Past medical conditions should be noted that could be an important cause of current or potential pain conditions (multiple sclerosis, prior cancer diagnoses, diabetes). The past surgical history should be obtained when relevant. Visceral dysfunctions such as renal or hepatic compromise or short gut syndrome that could affect absorption or metabolic function have an important role when considering pharmacologic treatments.

Dementia, depending on the severity, may affect how the pain is assessed and is discussed in a different chapter.


MOOD ASSESSMENT

The psychological state of the individual with chronic pain is an important determinant of pain, disability, and coping. The pain itself can lead to an altered psychological state, but previous traumatic psychological events can also alter pain perception. The goal of the initial assessment is not to clearly define all psychological risk factors, mood disorders, or coping strategies but to get a sense of areas of concern, so that they can be more fully evaluated in the future.

Summary with potential questionnaires



  • Anxiety



    • GAD 7, GAD 2


    • PROMIS Short Form


  • Depression



    • PHQ 9, PHQ 2


    • PROMIS Short Form


  • PTSD



    • PTSD Civilian


  • Bipolar disorder



    • Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ)


Anxiety and depression are common and may decrease the patient’s tolerance to pain and reduce the coping ability. Major depression, anxiety disorders, PTSD, bipolar disorder, and suicidal ideation and plan should be identified and referred to the appropriate specialist.

A history of childhood traumatic events predicts an increased risk for the development of substance abuse, depressive disorders, and attempted suicides. Chronic pain creates an additional risk factor. Asking about childhood trauma can be difficult, especially in an initial interview, and the following question is suggested. “If you have a child, or imagine that you might, would you want them to have the same childhood you did?” Negative answers can be explored at a later time.

It is helpful to ask about current psychological states tactfully because many patients are sensitive to the idea that their pain, particularly pain that seems out of proportion to observable findings, is all in their head and become quite defensive when asked about how they are feeling. If the patient has completed a questionnaire, you should already know something about the mood and the way the patient thinks about the pain and coping strategies. You can use the patient’s answers to gently probe for more information. For example, “I see on this one questionnaire that you feel down or depressed most of the days. Can you tell me about that?”


PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS

Psychosocial factors are important variables in the comprehensive assessment of persistent pain. Numerous relevant factors have been described, and there are multiple assessment tools and measures to evaluate them.

Summary with potential questionnaires



  • Pain catastrophizing



    • Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS)


    • Modified STarT Back tool


  • Fear avoidance



    • TSK


    • Fear-Avoidance Belief Questionnaire


  • Perceived injustice



    • Injustice Experience Questionnaire (IEQ)

Two key ways of thinking about pain that impact functionality include pain catastrophizing and kinesophobia or health-related anxiety.

Pain catastrophizing is defined as “an exaggerated negative mental set, brought to bear during actual or anticipated painful experience.”9 Catastrophic thinking might contribute to the development or maintenance of anxiety, fear, or depression associated with pain. Life traumas such as major losses, severe accidents, and abuse experiences may sensitize individuals to distress reactions to future stressors.10

Those who catastrophically misinterpret innocuous bodily sensations, including pain, are more likely to become fearful of pain. This may result in avoidance behaviors and the avoidance of movement and physical activity in particular.

Kinesophobia is defined as “an irrational and debilitating fear of physical movement and activity resulting from a feeling of vulnerability to painful injury or re-injury.”1 The TSK measures the belief that painful activity will result in damage and/or will increase suffering and/or functional loss.11 Avoidance also means withdrawal from rewarding activities such as work, leisure, and family.

Pain-related fear is associated with increased bodily awareness and pain hypervigilance. Hypervigilance, fear, and disuse are associated with increased pain levels and often interfere with successful completion of an active rehabilitation program and return to work programs.

Some patients who experience chronic pain as a result of, or the perception of, another’s error or negligence may suffer from the perception of injustice. This has been described as an appraisal cognition comprising elements of the severity of loss consequent to injury, blame, a sense of unfairness, and irreparability of loss. In a prospective study of individuals with mixed musculoskeletal pain, Sullivan et al.12 demonstrated that high scores on this measure predicted work disability at 1-year follow-up, even when controlled for depression, pain-related fear, catastrophizing, and pain severity.

Other psychosocial factors that may contribute to pain include the influence of others, for example, a spouse that is distant or even over solicitous; lack of family and/or community support; litigation issues; previous sexual or physical abuse; financial security; and status of health care coverage.


COPING STRATEGIES

Of the seven factors that predicted most of the pain-related disability, Davidson et al.2 identified positive and negative coping strategies as being important.

Asking patients what coping strategies they use can help to identify their coping strengths and opportunities for future treatment strategies.

Some positive coping strategies include the following:



  • Pacing


  • Prioritizing and day planning


  • Setting self-motivated goals and action plans


  • Being patient and accepting small achievements over time


  • Using relaxation skills such as reading, listening to music, meeting friends for coffee/tea or other social activity, practicing breathing, meditation skills, or walking


  • Stretching and exercising regularly


  • Keeping a diary to document progress


  • Having a plan for when the pain flares

If available, a referral to a clinical psychologist specializing in pain should be made, especially if one or more of the following factors have been identified: pronounced emotional disturbance; pain behavior enabled by the family, possible secondary gain; failure to respond to several treatment modalities; reports of pain severity or functional impairment which seem inconsistent with disability; or excessive use of health care services.


SLEEP DISORDERS

The relationship between pain and sleep dysfunction can be complex, and up to 60% of patients with chronic pain report sleep disturbance.13 Most patients report that sleep is interrupted due to pain, many develop unhealthy sleep patterns, and up to 70% of patients with insomnia have chronic pain.14 A night continually interrupted by pain rather than reduced sleeping time may impair the endogenous pain-inhibitory function creating spontaneous pain.15

Summary with potential questionnaires



  • PROMIS Sleep Disturbance (four-, six-, or eight-question version items)


  • PROMIS Sleep-Related Impairment (nine items) (measures the effects of poor sleep on daily function)


  • STOP-Bang (for obstructive sleep apnea)

A sleep history should identify the type of sleep difficulty (getting to sleep or staying asleep); document the patient’s current sleep hygiene; and screen for possible sleep apnea, restless leg syndrome, and periodic limb movements. Patients may be unaware of either the leg jerking or apneic episodes but have associated partial awakenings that impair sleep and cause daytime fatigue. Bed partners may be able to give important information regarding leg jerking movements and apneic spells during the night. If they do not have a bed partner, overnight oximetry or a more formal sleep study may be necessary to make a diagnosis.

Patients with PTSD may have nightmares and flashbacks and often require specific therapies to ensure a restful sleep.



COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT

Cognitive impairment in individuals with chronic pain has been widely described, and many patients report it has a marked effect on their quality of life. The relationship is not straightforward as pain can cause cognitive impairment, but increasing non-pain-related cognitive load (i.e., distraction) can reduce perceived pain.16

One study of a multidisciplinary pain center population demonstrated 20% of patients underperformed on tests measuring working memory, verbal learning and memory, psychomotor speed, and attention.17

Persistent pain moderately affects working memory in a consistent and significant manner and causes deficits in attentional control. Attention, which is linked closely with working memory, allows the brain to select the relevant inputs for storage and processing into working memory.18 Many patients complain that pain is distracting.

Modeling the underlying causes of cognitive impairment in individuals with chronic pain has identified a few possibilities including pain competing for attention in a brain with limited resources, neuroplasticity, and dysregulated neurochemistry.16 The effects of comorbid disease such as Parkinson and affective disorders such as anxiety or depression and the effects of age, sleep disturbance, and medication all play a role.

Medication has been shown to both increase and reduce cognitive impairment, the latter possibly due to the effects of tolerance to side effects and pain reduction.

Confirming cognitive impairment is an important element of the pain evaluation, but a detailed evaluation is better done by a qualified psychologist as there are many methodologic issues to consider including the exact nature of the deficits, comparison of objective and subjective complaints, control for effort, and covariates including pain severity, depression, and fatigue at the time of testing.17


VOCATIONAL HISTORY AND CURRENT VOCATIONAL DISABILITY

A brief history of the patient’s schooling, vocational training, and recent employment or disability status should be obtained.

In 2009, a working group identified seven core factors affecting return to work in men with chronic low back pain where each of the core factors were at least supported by one review.18 The seven core factors were (1) heavy physical demands, (2) ability to modify work, (3) job stress, (4) social support, (5) job satisfaction, (6) return to work expectation, and (7) fear of reinjury. Although job satisfaction is often assumed to be highly predictive, a study of 574 individuals with chronic low back pain reported that a high expectation of return to work was the strongest predictor of return to work and high levels of job satisfaction was not predictive.19


HABITS

Always ask about smoking history because this is something the patient has the choice to decide to quit, even though it is very difficult.

Also inquire about past attempts at quitting, alcohol use, diet, exercise, weight changes, the use of cannabis, and other nonprescribed or illicit drug use.


Risk of Opioid Misuse, Abuse, or Dependence

Opioid dependence exists as a spectrum disorder and can complicate the management of a patient with persistent pain. It is important to screen for opioid misuse and abuse and to reevaluate for all of these problems in each follow-up visit for patients who take these and other controlled substances.

There are several questionnaires that can screen for the risk of aberrant behaviors that may occur with opioid use or assess the risk of addiction to alcohol or other substances or behaviors.20

Summary with potential questionnaires



  • AUDIT


  • SISAP


  • PROMIS Short Form Alcohol Use


  • CAGE-AID, screening tool to assess for risk of serious alcohol or drug problems


  • ORT


  • SOAPP14


  • COMM

Urine toxicology testing can be done as a point-of-care test with the results available in as early as 5 minutes. This allows a discussion about potential aberrant results, either positive or negative, to be held at the time of the appointment. If no obvious explanation is forthcoming, without any accusation, the urine should be sent for more sensitive and specific laboratory confirmation. There are many medications that may give false positives on a clinic test, so laboratory confirmation and, if necessary, discussion with a forensic pathologist are important before potentially accusing the patient of aberrant behavior.

If available, a review of the local prescription monitoring program or pharmacy printout, to assess previous prescriptions of scheduled medications such as opioids and benzodiazepines, is important.

The prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) are electronic databases run by all individual states in the United States except Missouri. They collect data entered by pharmacists on dispensed controlled medications. The data is housed by a specified statewide regulatory, administrative, or law enforcement agency.

The benefit is that they allow health care providers see patients’ prescribing histories which may influence their prescribing decisions. Unfortunately, as yet, there is no conformity among states on the time to enter data after the prescription has been filled. This ranges from monthly to daily or even in “real time”; that is, under 5 minutes. Timely data should maximize the utility of the prescription history data, with significant implications for patient safety and public health.

Partly because of poor utilization, some states have implemented polices that require providers to check a state PDMP prior to prescribing certain controlled substances. PDMPs can also be used to send “proactive” reports to authorized users to protect patients at the highest risk and identify inappropriate prescribing trends. One study reported on sending prescribers unsolicited reports about individuals on opioids who fulfil certain criteria such as multiple prescribers. Compared to a comparison group whose prescribers were not sent a report, the interventional group had significant decreases in number and dosage of opioids prescribed, number of pharmacies used, and number of prescribers visited.21

States have taken a number of steps to make PDMPs easier to use and access. These include integrating PDMPs into electronic health record (EHR) systems, permitting physicians to delegate PDMP access to other allied health professionals in their office (e.g., physician assistants and nurse practitioners), and streamlining the process for providers to register with the PDMP. PDMPs are also used by state health departments to inform and evaluate interventions of perceived overprescribing of controlled substances. A 2017 study21 reported that states with a strong PDMP program, calculated using legal data compiled by the Prescription Drug Abuse Policy System (PDAPS), together with other covariates such as laws that regulate pain clinics, access to naloxone, use of emergency services (Good Samaritan laws), and medical marijuana, had a significantly lower opioid overdose rate than states with a less robust program.22


PDMPs are playing an important role in evaluating the prescribing of controlled substances both for the prescriber and the regulatory authorities. Given the other general recommendations for careful charting of function and mood, opioid agreements, and random urine toxicology screens, PDMPs give the health care provider another objective way of assessing patients. The concern about opioid knowledge and too much regulation was addressed in a study by Hwang et al.22 in 2016. Their conclusion was that “although physicians are unaware of some facets of prescription opioid-related morbidity, most support a variety of clinical and regulatory interventions to improve the risk-benefit balance of these therapies.” Only a third of physicians contacted believed that interventions to reduce prescription opioid abuse would have a moderate or large effect on preventing patients’ clinically appropriate access to pain treatment.23

Assessment and treatment of addiction is covered in a separate chapter.


Assessment of Function

It is important to assess the functional impact of persistent pain by trying to quantify an individual’s ability to engage in a number of different activity domains. Function is one domain measured in quality-of-life assessments, so most questionnaires have overlapping questions that measure some aspects of both.

Three kinds of self-assessment questionnaires have been developed: general questionnaires applicable to all kinds of pain like the EuroQol, which is short, six questions but has complex scoring and weighting, or the four-, six-, or eight-item PROMIS Measures of Physical Function; disease-specific ones like the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire; and regional ones, for example, the Oswestry Disability Index for back pain.

The questions should cover all of the relevant areas and usually include the impact of pain on domains such as employment, social, recreational, family, or home responsibilities. It should assess self-care and ideally evaluate the overall quality of life.

Summary of potential questionnaires



  • General questionnaires



    • Brief Pain Inventory


    • PEG: measures three items, average pain, interference with enjoyment of life, and general activity


    • STarT Back: includes catastrophizing questions, useful to assess for potential chronicity


    • EuroQol


    • PROMIS Short Form Physical Function


    • PROMIS Global Health


    • Work Productivity and Activity Impairment Questionnaire


  • Specific questionnaires (there are many—these are just a few)



    • Oswestry Disability Index: specific for back pain


    • Neck Disability Index: specific for the neck

It is not uncommon in clinical practice to see a patient in follow-up who declares the pain to be much better, yet a review of the functionality questionnaire indicates a higher score than the previous visit.

For instance, on the Brief Pain Inventory, patients may rate their leg pain at 8/10 and the pain interference for walking at 6/10 one week and a month later rate their leg pain less at 5/10 yet rate their pain interference for walking at 9/10.

This may be because they are walking less due to depression, are not paying attention to the weighing scale, or have forgotten how bad their pain used to be (recall bias).

But pain interference scales also suffer from something called response drift, which involves reprioritization, recalibration, and reconceptualization.

A patient can reprioritize his or her disabilities depending on the current circumstances. The main problem may have been headaches, and if the patient substantially improves, now the leg pain becomes the biggest issue and so not walking seems more impairing.

They may recalibrate it. In this case, a 5/10 one day is different than a 5/10 the next day. In the last month, the patient may have had a fracture dislocation of his left elbow and has now decided, that what he thought was 8/10 leg pain, he would now rate at 5/10.

When a patient reconceptualizes his or her disability, he or she has changed the internal concept of what disability due to leg function is. So, in this case, before, the patient felt disabled if he could not get to the bathroom, and now, he feels disabled if he can not get to the store.24




Goals



Sep 21, 2020 | Posted by in PAIN MEDICINE | Comments Off on Evaluation of the Chronic Pain Patient

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