Can cancer pain be controlled?
Cancer pain can be
controlled in almost every case. This does not mean that you have no pain, but it does mean that the pain stays at a level that you can bear.
Cancer and its
treatments can be painful. A tumor that presses on bones, nerves, or organs can
cause pain. Surgery for cancer can cause pain. So can
chemotherapy and
radiation. Some medical tests, such as bone marrow aspiration, can also cause pain. There are a number of ways to control each
of these kinds of pain.
There are different kinds of cancer pain. These include:
- Acute pain. This is bad pain that lasts a short time.
- Chronic pain. This is mild-to-intense pain that comes and goes over a long time.
- Breakthrough pain. This is sudden, severe pain that lasts for a short time while you are taking medicines that usually control your pain.
There are a number of ways to control each
of these kinds of pain.
You are the only person who can say how
much pain you have or if a certain pain medicine is working for you. Telling
your doctor exactly how you feel is one of the most important parts of
controlling pain.
What does your doctor need to know?
The more
specific you can be about your pain, the more your doctor will be able to treat
it. It often helps to write everything down. Include:
- When your pain started, what it feels like,
and how long it has lasted.
- Any changes in your pain.
- If the pain is constant or if it comes and goes.
- If
you have more than one kind of pain. Use words such as dull, aching, sharp,
shooting, or burning.
- What makes your pain better or
worse.
- A
rating of your pain on a scale of 0 to 10, with 10
being the worst pain you can imagine.
Tell your doctor exactly where you feel pain. You can use
a drawing. Say if the pain is just in one place, if it is in several places at
the same time, or if it moves from one place to another.
How is cancer pain managed?
Pain control often
starts with medicine. Many drugs are used to treat pain. You and your doctor
may need to adjust your medicine as your pain changes. Your doctor may suggest
different drugs, combinations of drugs, or higher doses.
For a
tumor that causes pain, removing or destroying all or part of the tumor, if
possible, often helps. Doctors use
radiation, surgery, and other treatments to do this.
For nerve pain, doctors may use nerve blocks. With a nerve block, medicine is injected right into the nerve that affects the painful area.
They provide short-term pain relief by preventing the nerve from sending pain
signals. Or sometimes medicine is delivered directly to the spine, as with spinal anesthesia or an epidural.
There
are many other ways to control cancer pain, including:
- Heat or cold.
- Massage, exercise, and physical therapy.
- Relaxation exercises, biofeedback, or guided imagery.
- Acupuncture.
Older adults are at risk for not getting enough pain medicine. If you are a caregiver for an older adult who has cancer,
talk with that person to make sure that the pain is under control. Talk with the person's doctor, too, about a pain
management plan.
Learning as much as you can about your pain may help.
Talking to a counselor can help you manage your cancer pain or the discomfort from cancer treatments. Emotional support from your friends and family may also help.
What is a pain control diary?
This is a record of
your pain treatment and how it helped or did not help you. You can write down
when you used each treatment, how it worked, and any side effects it caused.
Having it written down helps you let your health care team know exactly how
well your treatment is working.
Will you get addicted to pain medicine?
Many people who take pain medicine worry about getting
addicted. Addiction to pain medicine is rare if you have not had a problem with
addiction in the past and you take your medicine as directed under your
doctor's care. When you no longer need these medicines, your doctor will slowly lower the amount you are getting until your body no longer needs the medicine.
Do not let your fear about becoming addicted get in
the way of pain relief. Ask for pain relief if you need it. Pain is easier to
control when you treat it as soon as it starts. You may also be able to predict
pain and treat it before it begins, such as before physical activity. Pain is
harder to control if you wait until it is bad.