Do you want to learn how to reduce chronic pain and prevent acute phases by act on your lifestyle and get rid of pain? If yes, then keep reading...
Pain is an essential sign of disease and attempts to treat physiological pain should not be done before it is determined that the pain not be a sign of a treatable disease. When that has been ruled out, treatment of the pain can be initiated.
Acute pain can be treated successfully and safely by opioids and NSAIDs. The treatments that are in routine use for the common forms of physiological (acute) pain are many, and they differ mainly with regards to their side effects, costs, and the involvement of the person with pain that the individual methods require.
In general, the treatment for physiological pain is dominated by medications many of which can be obtained without a prescription, but pain medications that require a prescription are also in everyday use. Some of these medications are also effective for pathological pain, but for some kinds of pathological pain, the effectiveness of common pain medications is less than what it is for physiological pain.
As earlier in this, pain often has two different expressions; one being the perception (feeling) of the pain and the other being the adverse (adverse) effect of the pain also often referred to as suffering. Treating the suffering component seems more important for restoring a person's quality of life than treating the feeling of pain because the suffering reduces a person's quality of life more than the feeling of pain. Many medications, such as opioids, act mainly on the suffering aspect of pain, and they may not change the perception of pain much. Unfortunately, the use of opioids must be restricted because of risks of addiction and risk of death from overdose.
It is often possible to manage a person's pain, which means reducing the adverse effects of the pain as much as possible and it is possible to restore the person's quality of life to the greatest extent. A patient who is being treated for pain may say "I still have my pain, but it does not bother me anymore." A treatment that gives that response from a patient may be regarded as an effective treatment although the patient still feels pain.
Proper management of pain can make life better for many patients. People often are searching for treatments that can completely solve their problems instead of to improve their situation. People often underestimate how side effects can affect their lives, and physicians and often surgeons are not too eager to discuss side effects.
This book covers the following topics:
- What is the pain and inflammation?
- Pain and nervous system
- Memory of pain
- Stress and pain
- Common pain treatments
- Hypnosis for pain management.
- Pain and acupuncture.
- Pain Medication
- Breathing Exercise
- Understanding your Pain
- Strategies for Treating Pain
- Relaxation Can Relieve Your Pain
...And much more
A severe obstacle to achieving effective pain control is the way pain medications are administered. The possibility to affect pain conditions through a change in daily living has begun to win acceptance. A healthy lifestyle can improve many health problems including pain. Physical exercise, keeping a healthy weight and healthy eating with some supplements particularly Omega 3 and some vitamins can have beneficial effects although it may be difficult to pinpoint the effects.
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