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Intractable Pain Syndrome Has 2 Kinds of Pain

By Forest Tennant, PNN Columnist

A major reason that persons with Intractable Pain Syndrome (IPS) experience such misery is that when pain is the constant, 24/7 variety, it has two parts: ascending and descending pain. Both types need to be treated for relief.

Picture your body running on electric currents. In your house, electric currents are conducted by wire. Although there is no good reason to avoid the term “wire” when it comes to the human body, we usually refer to our biologic wires as nerves, nerve roots or neurons.

Unfortunately, any disease or injury to one or more of our “wires” blocks the electric currents that normally flow through the nerves, nerve roots or neurons, and diverts electricity into the surrounding tissue to produce inflammation and pain.

Ascending Pain is caused when pain electricity travels from the disease or injury site up the nervous system to the brain. This is the most common type of pain. For example, if you have a sore knee, pain signals travel from the knee to the brain.

Descending Pain is caused when severe pain from any number of diseases and injuries sends so much electricity into the brain and spinal cord that it accumulates. Areas of inflammation develop and destroy and/or damage the dopamine-noradrenaline neurotransmitter systems that control descending pain.

The excess electricity from these inflamed sites travels down the nervous system into muscles, skin, tendons, joints, fatty tissues, and the large and small peripheral nerves. Small nerve endings in the skin can “burn out” due to all the descending electricity and a skin biopsy will probably show small fiber neuropathy.

How do you know if you have descending pain? You have muscle aches all over which are often labeled as fibromyalgia. You hurt everywhere and experience episodes of overheating, sweating, and cold hands and feet, often at the same time!

Tips to Reduce Descending Pain

The critical point is that usual pain treatment only treats ascending pain, not descending pain. Opioids, antidepressants, anti-inflammatories and muscle relaxants do not usually do much for descending pain.

Each person with IPS must adopt a few simple but specific medical, physical, and dietary measures to attain some relief and recovery from both kinds of pain. You must maintain your dopamine-noradrenaline neurotransmitter systems daily, or you will have increased pain and misery, and believe that more drugs like opioids are the answer.

The understanding of blocked and diverted electric currents has led to the identification and labeling of a group of treatment agents that help normalize electric currents. These are known as neuropathic agents. The neurotransmitter most responsible for the proper conduction of electric currents is called gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA for short). It is synthesized by the body from the amino acid glutamine.

Neuropathic medications include gabapentin, pregabalin, carisoprodol, topiramate, duloxetine, and benzodiazepines.

In addition to neuropathic agents, there are simple “age-old” remedies that still work for most people because they help modulate electric currents so that they don’t divert, accumulate, and cause more inflammation and pain:

  • Water Soaking

  • Epsom or Herbal Salts

  • Magnets

  • Acupuncture

  • Copper Jewelry

  • Walking Barefoot

  • Dry Needling

  • Petting Fur

  • Magnesium

Every person with IPS needs a daily program of neuropathic agents and age-old remedies to minimize the consequences of accumulated electricity.

Forest Tennant is retired from clinical practice but continues his groundbreaking research on intractable pain and arachnoiditis. This column is adapted from newsletters recently issued by the IPS Research and Education Project of the Tennant Foundation. Readers interested in subscribing to the newsletter can sign up by clicking here.

The Tennant Foundation has given financial support to Pain News Network and is currently sponsoring PNN’s Patient Resources section.  

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