Reduce Pain with Mindfulness

Reduce Pain with Mindfulness

 

By John M. de Castro, Ph.D.

 

“Mindfulness is an effective practice for approaching chronic pain. It teaches individuals to observe their pain, and be curious about it. And, while counterintuitive, it’s this very act of paying attention that can help your pain.” –  Margarita Tartakovsky

 

We all have to deal with pain. It’s inevitable, but hopefully it’s mild and short lived. For a wide swath of humanity, however, pain is a constant in their lives. At least 100 million adult Americans and 1.5 billion people worldwide, have common chronic pain conditions. It is important to remember that pain is an important signal that there is something wrong or that damage is occurring. This signals that some form of action is needed to mitigate the damage. This is an important signal that is ignored at the individual’s peril. So, in dealing with pain, it’s pain signals should not be completely blocked or prevented. They need to be perceived. But, methods are needed to mitigate the pain and the psychological distress produced.

 

The most common treatment for chronic pain is drugs. These include over-the-counter analgesics and opioids. But opioids are dangerous and prescription opioid overdoses kill more than 14,000 people annually. The situation in the U.S. with opioid overdoses has become so severe that it’s taken on epidemic proportions. So, there is a great need to find safe and effective ways to lower the psychological distress and improve the patient’s ability to cope with the pain. Pain involves both physical and psychological issues. The stress, fear, and anxiety produced by pain tends to elicit responses that actually amplify the pain. So, reducing perceived stress and the emotional reactions to pain may be helpful in pain management. Indeed, mindfulness practices have been shown to reduce the physiological and psychological responses to stress and to improve emotion regulation producing more adaptive and less maladaptive responses to emotions. As a result, mindfulness practices have been shown to be effective in treating pain.

 

In today’s Research News article “Mindfulness meditation–based pain relief: a mechanistic account.” See summary below or view the full text of the study at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4941786/, Zeidan and Vago review the published research literature on the effectiveness of mindfulness practices in the treatment of pain. They report that the scientific research finds that mindfulness practices are safe and effective in treating perceived pain from a wide variety of conditions, including fibromyalgia, migraine, chronic pelvic pain, irritable bowel syndrome, and chronic low back pain.

 

Further, they report that the reduction in perceived pain appears to result from alterations of the nervous system. In particular, long-term meditators have significant increased activation of sensory processing–related brain regions (thalamus, insula) and reduced activation in brain areas that process the evaluation of pain (Medial Prefrontal Cortex), Orbital Frontal Cortex). There was also a significant relationship between meditative experience, lower perceived pain, and greater deactivation of the Medial Prefrontal Cortex / Orbital Frontal Cortex. Even after only brief meditation practice changes can be detected in brain areas that process pain stimuli (insula and anterior cingulate cortex) and the psychological appreciation of pain (Orbital Frontal Cortex).

 

These findings strongly suggest that in response to mindfulness practices multiple areas of the brain change, resulting in reduced subjective pain. These benefits can be obtained by short-term mindfulness practice but are further improved with long-term practice. Hence, mindfulness practices appear to be safe and effective alternative treatments to drugs and thereby may be useful in addressing the opioid epidemic.

 

So, reduce pain with mindfulness.

 

“When it comes to chronic pain, the key is learning to live with it rather than vainly trying to avoid or eradicate it . . .  Mindfulness practice is a wonderful opportunity to do just that. It helps to shift the locus of control from the outside (“this is happening to me and there is nothing I can do about it”) to the inside (“this is happening to me but I can choose how I relate to it”).” -Christiane Wolf

 

CMCS – Center for Mindfulness and Contemplative Studies

 

This and other Contemplative Studies posts are also available on Google+ https://plus.google.com/106784388191201299496/posts and on Twitter @MindfulResearch

 

Study Summary

 

Zeidan, F., & Vago, D. (2016). Mindfulness meditation–based pain relief: a mechanistic account. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1373(1), 114–127. http://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.13153

 

Abstract

Pain is a multidimensional experience that involves sensory, cognitive, and affective factors. The constellation of interactions between these factors renders the treatment of chronic pain challenging and financially burdensome. Further, the widespread use of opioids to treat chronic pain has led to an opioid epidemic characterized by exponential growth in opioid misuse and addiction. The staggering statistics related to opioid use highlight the importance of developing, testing, and validating fast-acting nonpharmacological approaches to treat pain. Mindfulness meditation is a technique that has been found to significantly reduce pain in experimental and clinical settings. The present review delineates findings from recent studies demonstrating that mindfulness meditation significantly attenuates pain through multiple, unique mechanisms—an important consideration for the millions of chronic pain patients seeking narcotic-free, self-facilitated pain therapy.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4941786/

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