Pain

Table of contents
  1. Comprehensive assessment
  2. Other assessment factors
  3. Assessment in the setting of dementia
  4. Management
  5. Analgesics
  6. Initiating morphine/oxycodone in opioid naive patients
  7. Neuropathic pain
  8. Causes
  9. Characterisation
  10. Management

The assessment and management of pain and other symptoms are the cornerstones of effective palliative care. There are different types of pain and many patients have more than one.

Comprehensive assessment

Other assessment factors

In a bio-medical model of practice it is tempting to assume that pain has a predominant physical component. Often, physical pain is only part of the symptom complex (through direct or indirect tumour effects or non-malignant processes).

Psychological, spiritual and sociological elements will also be identifiable in many people with pain. Fear, anxiety, sadness, anger, frustration and isolation are but a few of the feelings that can contribute to the total perception of pain. All of these elements help to build a realistic picture of the overall impact of pain on the individual's quality of life.

Assessment in the setting of dementia

People living with dementia who require palliative care may not, by virtue of cognitive impairment, be able to validly report either the presence of pain, or the level of pain they are experiencing. There is good evidence that those with dementia are likely to be prescribed up to 50% less analgesia in acute hospital settings than those with comparable needs who lack a dementia diagnosis.

There are a number of validated pain assessment scales that can inform pain assessment in the presence of dementia. They include the Abbey Pain Scale, the PAIN-AD and the electronic ePAT (electronic Pain Assessment Tool), which uses facial coding to determine the presence of pain. These are screening tools only and are no substitute for a comprehensive clinical assessment.

The emergence of new behavioural symptoms (such as withdrawal, agitation, anger, aggression and resistiveness to care) in a person with previously stable dementia symptoms should always be an indicator that pain may be an issue. It should be noted that the pain assessment tools mentioned above have not been validated in the presence of significant behavioural disturbance, as they do not reliably distinguish between pain and distress. In the absence of valid pain self-reporting in the setting of severe dementia, considering the views of a whānau-family caregiver who knows the patient and their usual behaviours well may be useful as part of the assessment process.

Unrecognised or undertreated pain can lead to the inappropriate prescription of psychotropic medication instead of adequate pain management.

Management

Discuss realistic goals of pain management with patient and whānau-family. Treat any exacerbating factors and consider disease modifying interventions.

It is important to encourage patients to develop self-management strategies – recognising that this may not be possible in people with dementia – and to utilise non-pharmacological strategies such as rest, positioning, pacing etc. There are also a number of enabling strategies like goal setting, pain management plans, scripts and diaries that many will find useful.

Address emotional, psychological and spiritual issues as these are intimately connected with the experience of physical pain.

Analgesics

morphine

or oxycodone

or fentanyl

or methadone

codeine

or dihydrocodeine

or tramadol

or buprenorphine

paracetamol or NSAIDs/COXII e.g. diclofenac, naproxen, celecoxib
adjunct-analgesics, specific therapies e.g. radiotherapy

Initiating morphine/oxycodone in opioid naive patients

Initiating fentanyl patches in opioid naive patients

Initiating methadone in opioid naive patients

Adverse effects of opioids

Opioid rotation

Opioid equivalents

Opiod Equivalent
codeine 60 mg oral = 6 mg oral morphine
tramadol 100 mg oral = 10 mg oral morphine
oxycodone 5 mg oral = 10 mg oral morphine
5 mg subcut = 5 mg subcut morphine
methadone seek advice from Palliative Medicine Specialist
fentanyl see Fentanyl page in Section 2
buprenorphine see Buprenorphine page in Section 2

Adjunct analgesics

Incident pain

Neuropathic pain

Causes

Characterisation

Management

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