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- $Unique_ID{BRK02465}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{What About Pain and Pains?}
- $Subject{pain ill defined symptoms symptom pained pains chronic sharp dull
- burning tingling aching consulting consult consultation}
- $Volume{N-0}
- $Log{}
-
- Copyright (c) 1992,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
-
-
- What About Pain and Pains?
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-
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-
- QUESTION: I know I am not the only person this has happened to, for all my
- friends have similar stories to tell. We go to our doctors with a pain that
- has become most distressing, only to be told that it is something we have to
- learn to live with because we are getting older. I admit that there are more
- such pains these days, but what if the pain was a sign of something serious?
- How can we make our doctors listen a bit more attentively to our complaints?
- You would be doing a great many people a real service if you could provide us
- this answer.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ANSWER: Probably the most common complaint heard in a doctor's office
- concerns pain of one type or another. To be sure, there are many aches and
- twinges that also form part of a patient's concern, and it is important for
- both patient and physician to try and tell these "minor" complaints from
- serious pain which may have a more serious cause.
- From my experience, the more precisely the patient can describe the pain,
- the surer I am that it is an important complaint that can not be passed over
- lightly. Not that any complaint should ever be dismissed without proper
- evaluation, but a new development that is intense enough to bring a patient to
- the office always requires careful attention. You can do a great deal to
- focus the doctor's attention on your immediate concern, by providing precise
- answers to the questions that are required to properly evaluate the
- seriousness of a pain. When did the pain start, and is it sharp, dull,
- burning, tingling or aching? Does it come and go, and what seems to make it
- worse, or perhaps feel better? Try to grade the pain on a scale of 0 (no pain
- at all) to 10 (the worst pain imaginable) and tell the doctor the score for
- this pain. Have you taken any pain medications, and did they take any pain
- away? All this information can help your doctor use this symptom to make a
- diagnosis of the ailment that is causing the discomfort. The best way to
- treat a pain is to treat the illness. Unfortunately there are some chronic
- conditions where pain never seem to ease up, but a bit of compassion and
- concern on the part of a caring doctor can sometimes even make those pains a
- bit easier to bear.
-
- ----------------
-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
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-