What is pain and what is happening when we feel it?

What is pain and what is happening when we feel it?

What is pain? It might seem like an easy question. The answer, however, depends on who you ask.

Some say pain is a warning signal that something is damaged, but what about pain-free major trauma? Some say pain is the body’s way of telling you something is wrong, but what about phantom limb pain, where the painful body part is not even there?

Pain scientists are reasonably agreed that pain is an unpleasant feeling in our body that makes us want to stop and change our behaviour. We no longer think of pain as a measure of tissue damage – it doesn’t actually work that way even in highly controlled experiments. We now think of pain as a complex and highly sophisticated protective mechanism.

How does pain work?

Our body contains specialised nerves that detect potentially dangerous changes in temperature, chemical balance or pressure. These “danger detectors” (or “nociceptors”) send alerts to the brain, but they cannot send pain to the brain because all pain is made by the brain.

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Why different painkillers are only effective for certain types of pain

Why different painkillers are only effective for certain types of pain

Whether it’s your head, tooth or back, when you’re in pain, it’s hard to think about anything else. If it’s not too strong, some can ride it out. But in many cases, the pain just gets worse and won’t go away until you take something.

Medicines that kill pain are called analgesics and they vary in how they work. No single painkiller can relieve all types of pain. Those that work for mild pain usually have little effect on severe pain unless combined with a stronger painkiller.

If you want to effectively control your pain, you will need to match your medication to its type and severity.

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Immediate Steps To Improve your Practice

Immediate Steps To Improve your Practice

What the patient sees, hears or feels can trigger neurohumoral reactions within the body that translate into windows of therapeutic opportunity. There are many ways that therapists can leverage the placebo effect for the benefit of their patients. Some tips that I learnt early in my career from my mentor Dr. Anthony Lombardi

  • Exude confidence 
  • Present your self in a warm manner
  • Dress in a unique way
  • Choose your words carefully (The way we speak has the potential to act as a placebo or nocebo) 
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Body Worlds: Animals Inside Out

Body Worlds: Animals Inside Out

Since 2005 I have attended every Body Worlds Exhibit that has been hosted in Ontario. In 2005 it was at The Ontario Science Centre in Toronto [Body Worlds 2] and then in 2009 Body Worlds [The Story of The Heart] was held  at the Ontario Science Centre. This year [2015] The Museum of Nature in Ottawa Ontario hosted Body Worlds [Animal Inside Out].

For anyone unfamiliar with Body Worlds, is it is a method where biological tissue is preserved through plastination. This is a process invented by Gunther Von Hagens that replaces water and soluble fat with a reactive polymer, such as silicone rubber in order to preserve tissue.

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