multidisciplinary and integrative approach to pain care in 2008.20 The Veterans Health Administration issued a national directive in 2009, mandating the implementation of at least 1 interdisciplinary pain rehabilitation program for each of the 21 Veterans Integrated Service Networks.21 Another rapid change occurred after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released its Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain in March 2016, with a greater emphasis placed back on behavioral and rehabilitation approaches to managing persistent pain.22,23 Both the National Institutes for Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines now recommend nonpharmacological physical therapy (PT) as a primary approach for the treatment of chronic, noncancer pain.1,22
TABLE 23-1 Overview of Pain Mechanism Classifications | ||||||||||
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can be considered active, because the patient is taking ownership of the process. Active cognitive coping and self-management skills appear to be the most significant mediators of positive outcomes for those who participate in multidisciplinary pain rehabilitation programs.47,58,59 Active strategies employed by physical therapists include education, adaptations, facilitation, graded motor imagery, exercise-based interventions, and graded exposure techniques.
TABLE 23-2 Physical Therapies for Persistent Pain | ||||
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commonly explain pain problems using anatomy references or in terms of pathoanatomy or disease states. Clinicians are likely unaware of how their word choice influences the cognitions and actions of patients, and having a deeper understanding of this might improve health care delivery.91,92,93 Metaphors help people understand and express experience through language,94 although the metaphors we choose in health care could have unforeseen nocebo effects on patients, particularly if they evoke images of vulnerability, frailty, or damage. For example, a popular way to explain functions of the human body is by comparing it with a mechanical object with parts that break down after too much use or that the body must follow specific rules of alignment to function well and without pain. “Wear and tear” is considered benign by many health care providers, yet when patients describe their conditions in terms of degeneration, they demonstrate a poor self-prognosis.95 Stress associated with fear, anxiety, and threat triggers a cascade of neurophysiological events, including systemic endocrine upregulation, enhanced immune response, and localized neurogenic inflammation.96,97 Patients with chronic pain can exist in this state of perpetual stress and threat related to bodily sensations. The resultant biochemical cascade can negatively impact the body and mind, affecting cognition, endocrine function, sleep, and the experience of pain.96,97,98 People who exist in a state of perpetual threat frequently develop maladaptive catastrophic thought patterns and/or kinesiophobia. They tend to avoid activity and are more likely to have poor long-term outcomes for pain and overall health. Choosing words with limited threat value and teaching about pain physiology, rather than strictly anatomy, can reduce fear-induced stress and improve the l ives of patients suffering with persistent pain conditions.99,100,101
TABLE 23-3 PNE Curriculum Contents | |||||||||
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following questions: Will exercise cause harm? Is exercise beneficial as treatment of chronic pain? How should exercise be prescribed if it hurts to move?
TABLE 23-4 PNE as Adjunct Therapy | |||||||
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the neurobiological adaptations present in persistent pain states
patient expectations and goals
a patient’s past experiences with exercise
exercise mode accessibility