Educating Yourself on How Pain Functions and How Ultracet May Help
Wondering Why are you having pain? What’s happening physically? Pain is caused by an
exchange of information between three major systems in your body: your
peripheral nerves, spinal cord, and brain
Peripheral nerves contain fibers that bring pain impulses to the spinal cord.
Many of them have ends that sense danger, such as a cut or burning. These
fibers are called nociceptors, and you have millions of them throughout your
body.
Different types of nociceptors have different jobs. For example, some, nociceptors
detect heat, while others watch out for pricks of pain, and still others
respond to pressure. Once they detect these qualitative sensations, nociceptors
then send pain signals to your spinal cord.
Your spinal cord is home to special cells that either wave the signals on
through to the brain or turn them away like a hatch dropping in a cage.
Your spinal cord cells also release chemicals during this alert phase.
The pain signals that are waved through to your brain arrive at the thinking
and emotion centers where your brain then decides what on earth is causing
the problem, whether it’s worth getting anxious about, and what, if anything,
to do about it.
Sometimes this complicated pain system crashes, kind of like a malfunctioning
computer, yet the electricity keeps humming because the power’s still on.
The result is that your nerve/spinal cord system continues to send alert
signals to your brain even though the real threat has long since passed (or
maybe never existed in the first place).
Of course, this section describes chronic pain in a very basic way.
Constant Pain Causes Its Own Damage
Constant pain results in its own damage, and medical science has just begun
to understand just how toxic the effects are. In fact, many pain experts say
that the pain has become its own disease.
What happens is that the presence of painreconfigures the peripheral nerve/spinal cord/brain system, causing the pain itself to get worse. As a result, addressing the pain, as well as the underlying disease or injury, is key to preventing even more pain.
Learning How Pain Functions and How Ultracet May Help
The fact that pain is subjective and complicated means that it’s up to you to take charge of your own care and treatment. You should understand enough
about what causes your pain so that you can be on top of the best treatments
You also should discover how to do as much for yourself as you can, including
the following:
Developing a great pain management team
tracking down and avoiding your own individual pain triggers
Relieving your pain with lifestyle changes, such as maintaining a
nutritional diet, exercising, and minimizing stress
Managing pain medically
When you suffer a chronic pain condition, you need to take control and gather
a team of experts to help you find relief.
You need to find medical professionals and paraprofessionals
who will work with you on different aspects of your pain condition.
For example, your group may include a primary-care physician (PCP), a specialist
such as a neurologist or rheumatologist, and perhaps a physical therapist
and a dietician. Your team also may contain some alternative practitioners,
such as an acupuncturist or massage therapist.
Your pain management team should work with you to find the right medicines
and treatments that give you pain relief.
Some people with chronic pain may need surgery, which is a tough decision
for anyone to make.
Helping yourself with lifestyle changes
Your chronic pain can be made better or worse by your lifestyle. Not eating a
healthy diet, being under- or overweight, not getting adequate exercise on a
regular basis, and being stressed out can all make your pain worse.
Here are the key concepts:
Ask your doctor if pain medication Tramadol may help you.
Track your pain triggers and avoid them. Pain triggers are things in your
life – such as overdoing exercise or missing too many hours sleep – that
can set off a pain cycle. Keeping a pain log can help you identify your particular
pain triggers. When you know what your own personal pain triggers
are, you can avoid them, and you’ll feel better!
Purge “empty calories” from your diet and follow sound nutritional
principles. The key principle of a healthy diet is to eat a well-balanced
variety of wholesome foods so that you’ll take in all the nutrients required
for good health and disease prevention. A healthy diet also means only
occasionally eating white rice, white bread, potatoes, white pasta (pasta
made from refined flour), soda, and sweets for special occasions.
Get physical! If you don’t get adequate exercise for an extended period
of time (weeks, months, or longer!), you develop a physical state called
deconditioning. The No. 1 rule for exercise and chronic pain is to do as
much as you can as often as you can.
Develop sound sleeping habits and beat fatigue. Sleep loss can make you
much more sensitive to pain. One study found that sleep deprivation
caused by continuous sleep disturbances throughout the night increased
spontaneous pain and impaired the body’s ability to cope with it.
De-stress your life. When you have chronic pain, every day you must
deal with the stress it creates. The best approach is to curb your stress
as much as you can, whenever you can. From meditation to praying,
numerous techniques can help reduce both your stress and pain.