The mystery of chronic pain Elliot Krane

[Music]

I’m a pediatrician and an

anesthesiologist so I put children to

sleep for a living and I’m an academic

so I put audiences to sleep for free

but what I actually mostly do is I

manage the pain management service at

the Packard Children’s Hospital up at

Stanford in Palo Alto and it’s from the

experience of about 20 or 25 years of

doing that that I want to bring to you

the message this morning that pain is a

disease now most of the time you think

of pain is a symptom of a disease and

that’s true most of the time it’s the

symptom of a tumor or an infection or an

inflammation or an operation but about

10 percent of the time after the patient

has recovered from one of those events

pain persists it persists for months and

oftentimes for years and when that

happens it is its own disease and before

I tell you about how it is that we think

that happens and what we can do about it

I want to show you how it feels for my

patients so imagine if you will then I’m

stroking your arm with this feather as

I’m stroking my arm right now now I want

you to imagine that I’m stroking it with

us please keep UC

a very different feeling now what does

it have to do with chronic pain imagine

if you will these two ideas together

imagine what your life would be like if

I were to stroke it with his feather but

your brain was telling you that this is

what you were feeling and that is the

experience of my patients with chronic

pain in fact imagine something even

worse imagine I were to stroke your

child’s arm with this feather and their

brain were telling them that they were

feeling this hot torch that was the

experience of my patient Chandler whom

you see in the photograph as you can see

she’s a beautiful young woman she was

sixteen years old last year when I met

her and she aspired to be a professional

dancer and during the course of one of

her dance rehearsals she fell on her

outstretched arm and sprained her wrist

now you would probably imagine as she

did that a wrist sprain is a trivial

event in a person’s life rapid in an ace

bandage takes some ibuprofen for a week

or two and that’s the end of the story

but in Chandler’s case that was the

beginning of the story this is what her

arm looked like when she came to my

clinic about three months after her

sprain you can see that the arm is

discolored purplish in color it was

categorically cold to the touch

the muscles were frozen paralyzed

dystonic is how we refer to that the

pain had spread from her wrist

to her hands to her fingertips from her

wrist up to her elbow almost all the way

to her shoulder but the worst part was

not the spontaneous pain that was there

24 hours a day the worst part was that

she had allodynia the medical term for

the phenomenon that I just illustrated

with a feather and with the torch the

lightest touch of her arm the touch of a

hand the touch even of a sleeve of a

garment as she put it on caused

excruciating burning pain how can the

nervous system get this so wrong how can

the nervous system misinterpret an

innocent sensation like the touch of a

hand and turn it into the malevolent

sensation of the touch of the flame well

you probably imagine that the nervous

system in the body is hardwired like

your house in your house wires run in

the wall from the light switch

to a junction box in the ceiling and

from the junction box to the light bulb

and when you turn the switch on the

light goes on and when you turn the

switch off the light goes off so people

imagine the nervous system is just like

that if you hit your thumb with a hammer

these wires in your arm that of course

we call nerves transmit the information

up to the junction box in the spinal

cord where new wires new nerves take the

information up to the brain where you

become consciously aware that your thumb

is now hurt but the situation of course

in the human body is far more

complicated than that instead of it

being the case that that junction box in

the spinal cord is just simply where one

nerve communicates with the next nerve

by releasing these little brown packets

of chemical information called

neurotransmitters in a linear one-on-one

fashion in fact what happens is the

neurotransmitters spill out in three

dimensions laterally vertically up and

down in the spinal cord and they start

interacting with other adjacent cells

these cells called glial cells where

once thought to be unimportant

structural elements of the spinal cord

that did nothing more than hold all the

important things together like the

nerves but it turns out the glial cells

have a vital role in the modulation

amplification and in the case of pain

the distortion of sensory experiences

these glial cells become activated their

DNA starts to synthesize new proteins

which spill out and interact with

adjacent nerves and they start releasing

their neurotransmitters and those

neurotransmitters spill out and activate

adjacent glial cells and so on and so

forth until what we have is a positive

feedback loop it’s almost as if somebody

came into your home and rewired your

wall so the next time you turned on the

light switch the toilet flushed three

doors down or your dishwasher went on or

your computer monitor turned off that’s

crazy

but that’s in fact what happens with

chronic pain and that’s why pain becomes

its own disease the nervous system has

plasticity it changes and it morphs in

response to stimuli well what do we do

about that what can we do

case like Chandler’s we treat these

patients in a rather crude fashion at

this point in time we treat them with

symptom modifying drugs painkillers

which are frankly not very effective for

this kind of pain we take nerves that

are noisy and active that should be

quiet and we put them to sleep with

local anesthetics and most importantly

what we do is we use a rigorous and

often uncomfortable process of physical

therapy and occupational therapy to

retrain the nerves in the nervous system

to respond normally to the activities

and sensory experiences that are part of

everyday life and we support all of that

with a intensive psychotherapy program

to address the despondency despair and

depression that always accompanies

severe chronic pain it’s successful as

you can see from this video of Chandler

who two months after we first met her is

now doing a backflip and I had lunch

with her yesterday because she’s a

college student studying dance at Long

Beach chair and she’s doing absolutely

fantastic but the future is actually

even brighter the future holds the

promise that new drugs will be developed

that are not symptom modifying drugs

that simply mask the problem as we have

now but that will be disease modifying

drugs that will actually go right to the

root of the problem and attack those

glial cells or those pernicious proteins

that the glial cells elaborate that

spill over and cause the central nervous

system wind-up

or plasticity that so is capable of

distorting and amplifying the sensory

experience that we call pain so that I

have hope that in the future the

prophetic words of George Carlin will be

realized who said my philosophy no pain

no pain

thank you very much

[Applause]

you

[音乐]

我是儿科医生和

麻醉师,所以我让孩子们

睡觉以谋生,我是一名学者,

所以我让观众免费睡觉,

但我实际上主要做的是我

在 Packard 管理疼痛管理服务

位于帕洛阿尔托斯坦福的儿童医院,从我从事这

方面工作 20 或 25 年的经验

来看,今天早上我想向

您传达的信息是,疼痛是一种

疾病,现在大多数时候您

认为疼痛是一种症状 一种疾病,

这是真的,大多数时候它

是肿瘤、感染、

炎症或手术的症状,但

在患者从其中一个事件中恢复后,大约 10% 的时间

疼痛会持续数月,而且通常会持续

多年来,当这种

情况发生时,它本身就是一种疾病,在

我告诉你我们认为这种情况是如何

发生的以及我们能做些什么之前,

我想向你展示我的病人对它的感觉,

所以想象一下,如果你愿意,那么我 我很

强壮 用这根羽毛来控制你的手臂,因为

我现在正在抚摸我的手臂

这两个想法一起

想象如果

我用他的羽毛抚摸你的生活会是什么样子,但

你的大脑告诉你这

就是你的感受,这

就是我的慢性

疼痛患者的经历事实上想象更

糟糕的事情 想象一下,我

用这根羽毛抚摸你孩子的手臂,他们的

大脑告诉他们,他们正在

感受这火热的火炬,这

是我的病人钱德勒的经历,

你在照片中看到

她,她是一个美丽的年轻女子,她

16 岁 去年我认识

她 1 岁时,她立志成为一名专业

舞者,在

她的一次舞蹈排练过程中,她

伸出手臂摔倒,扭伤了手腕,

现在你可能会想 就像她

一样,

手腕扭伤在一个人的生命中是

一件

微不足道的事 她的

手臂在扭伤后大约三个月来到我的诊所时的样子

你可以看到手臂

变色 呈紫色

摸起来绝对冰冷

肌肉被冻结 瘫痪

张力障碍 这就是我们所说的

疼痛已经蔓延 从她的手腕

到她的手到她的指尖从她的

手腕到她的肘部几乎一直

到她的肩膀但最糟糕的部分

不是每天 24 小时都存在的自发性疼痛

最糟糕的部分是

她患有异常性疼痛医学术语

因为我刚才用羽毛和手电筒描绘的现象

她手臂最轻的触碰 一只

手的触碰 甚至是她穿上衣服的袖子的触碰

造成

难以忍受的灼痛

神经系统怎么会错得如此之大

就像

你家中的房子一样,

电线从电灯开关

到天花板上的接线盒,

从接线盒到灯泡

,当你打开开关时,

灯亮起,当你

关闭开关时, 灯熄灭了,所以人们

想象神经系统

就像你用锤子敲打拇指时一样

到大脑的信息,你

会意识到你的拇指

现在受伤了,但人体的情况当然

比这要复杂得多,而

不是 cas e 脊髓中的那个接线盒

只是一个

神经与下一个神经通信的地方,它

通过以线性一对一的方式释放这些称为神经递质的棕色小

化学信息包

,实际上发生的事情是

神经递质溢出 脊髓中

横向垂直上下的三个维度

,它们开始

与其他相邻细胞

相互作用 但事实证明,神经胶质细胞

在调节放大中起着至关重要的作用

,在疼痛的情况下,

感觉体验的扭曲

这些神经胶质细胞被激活,它们的

DNA 开始合成新的蛋白质

,这些蛋白质溢出并与

相邻的神经相互作用,它们开始释放

他们的神经递质和那些

神经递质溢出并激活

广告 jacent 神经胶质细胞

等等,直到我们得到一个正

反馈循环,这几乎就像有人

走进你的家并重新连接了你的

墙壁,所以下次你打开

电灯开关时,马桶冲掉了三个

门或你的洗碗机 继续或

您的计算机显示器关闭,这很

疯狂,

但实际上慢性疼痛会发生这种情况

,这就是为什么疼痛会成为

自己的疾病神经系统具有

可塑性它会改变并且会随着

刺激而变形我们

该怎么做 我们

确实像 Chandler 那样对待这些

病人 我们在这个时候以一种相当粗暴的方式

对待这些病人 我们用缓解

症状的药物 止痛药

坦率地说这些药物对这种疼痛不是很有效

我们采取

了应该安静的嘈杂和活跃的神经

我们用

局部麻醉剂让他们入睡,最重要的

是我们所做的是我们使用严格且

经常不舒服的物理

治疗和占领过程 最终疗法

重新训练神经系统中的神经,

使其对日常生活中的活动和感官体验做出正常反应

,我们

通过强化心理治疗计划

来支持所有这些,以解决

总是伴随

严重慢性疼痛的沮丧绝望和抑郁症 成功,正如

你从钱德勒的视频中看到的那样

,在我们第一次见到她两个月后,她

现在正在做后空翻,我

昨天和她共进午餐,因为她是一名

在长滩椅子上学习舞蹈的大学生

,她的表现绝对

出色,但未来是 实际上,

更光明的未来

有望开发

出新药,这些新药不是

像我们现在那样简单地掩盖问题的改善症状的药物,

而是真正能够

直击问题根源并攻击那些问题的疾病改善药物

神经胶质细胞或

神经胶质细胞精心加工的那些有害蛋白质

溢出并导致中央 神经

系统发条

或可塑性,因此能够

扭曲和放大

我们称之为疼痛的感觉体验,因此

我希望将来

乔治卡林的预言能够

实现,他说我的哲学没有痛苦,

没有痛苦,

谢谢 非常

[鼓掌]