Coping With Chronic Repetitive Strain Injury Pain: by Tamara Mitchell
Coping With Chronic Repetitive Strain Injury Pain: by Tamara Mitchell
Coping With Chronic Repetitive Strain Injury Pain: by Tamara Mitchell
Repetitive Strain
Injury Pain
By Tamara Mitchell
Image courtesy Medscape.com
Even with the best care and proper ergonomics, sometimes pain from repetitive strain injury
continues for months or even years. In this article we explore the ways people deal with pain and
how to effectively cope when pain has become a part of life.
Do not attempt to diagnose chronic pain without professional medical advice because it is
impossible to know if the pain is an indication of injury occurring. You always should be aware
of the warning signals your body is giving you. You should never “work through” pain and
ignore the signals that injury is probably occurring.
Chronic pain can interfere with sleep, enjoyment of life, and become a boundary to your whole
life. Chronic pain can suppress the immune system, encourage the growth of some forms of
cancer, affect blood pressure, and many other body functions. 1 It is really important to work with
your health practitioner and, ideally, a physical therapist and other team members such a
therapist/support group dealing with chronic pain.
When pain becomes chronic, psychological factors become very important in developing coping
strategies.2 There are many possible causes for chronic pain and a handful of proven ways to
address it. In addition to the usual approaches to manage pain and improve physical functioning,
it is important to address lifestyle factors that can contribute to pain and escalate injury, or
conversely to help reduce pain and promote healing.
Western lay thinking and the medical community at large has a deep division between mind and
body engrained by the biomedical model of health-care professionals.3 Research has shown that
patients with medical conditions, but without psychosocial problems are viewed as more credible
than those either with or without a medical problem, but who claim that they have some
psychosocial problems.3 In some cases of RSI, no physical cause can be found for the pain
experienced by a patient. It is probably frustrating to doctors, as it is to patients, when a medical
solution cannot “fix” the problem and when the only medical solution seems to be a
pharmaceutical one. The opioid epidemic is very real partly because so many people suffer from
chronic pain and there is no medical solution. Taking a pill to kill the pain is only one solution
and it comes with a fairly high price. Doctors may prescribe pills because the pharmaceutical
industry is a powerful force driven by profits, but throughout history and in many other cultures,
people take more personal responsibility for their happiness and health rather than relying on a
pill to solve their problems.4 There is actually little known about all the mechanisms of pain and
pharmaceutical solutions all come with known and unknown side-effects.4
1
A psychological solution can afford a lot of valuable ways to deal with pain, from coping
strategies to guided imagery. Physicians are not trained in these techniques and when a doctor
has gone as far as possible to help, it makes perfect sense to take a multidisciplinary approach to
pain relief. Patients need to realize that mind and body are both involved in pain and the response
to pain. It often isn’t a matter of continuing the endless search for a medical answer to the source
of pain. Chronic pain has been shown to make permanent changes to the brain, often
damaging.5,6
In the case of RSI, we know that the link between mind and body is very close resulting in
physical manifestations of psychological traumas, especially with stress and other emotional
burdens. At the same time, injury and pain place their own psychological burdens on people,
often resulting in more stress, depression, anger, etc.
This article is devoted to exploring research and suggestions found to be successful in helping
people deal with the burden of chronic pain. The author of this article has suffered chronic pain
for decades, so much of this advice comes from a sense of compassion and an attempt to reveal a
variety of ways people and research have found helpful. Your health is in your own hands. How
much effort you put into developing strategies to deal not only with the physical pain, but the
psychological issues of depression, sense of loss of capabilities, and frustration is entirely up to
you. Each person who reads this will have their own injury to deal with, their own history of
pain, their own attempts and styles of dealing with pain. Some may be new to chronic pain and
some may have been dealing with it for years. It is not easy, but learning to approach your body
with love and care is a great first step in healing and getting on with life, the good days, the bad
days, the successes and the setbacks.
Praying, hoping, or feeling like your pain is catastrophic increases both disability and depression.8
The adaptive strategies actually decrease depression, but have not been found to significantly
affect disability.8
The second method of studying coping strategies is called the Chronic Pain Coping Inventory.
These have more to do with behaviors rather than thoughts and include:8
Maladaptive Adaptive
• Guarding • Relaxation
• Resting • Task persistence
2
• Asking for assistance • Exercise/stretching
• Seeking social support
• Coping self-statements
Between the two defined coping strategy categorizations, it has been found that in general, the
maladaptive strategies for both are somewhat correlated, but not in all cases. Praying and
catastrophizing were significantly correlated to guarding and asking for assistance. Praying and
resting were also correlated which is consistent with a more hopeless, helpless, and dependent
mind-set (though certainly resting is desirable and necessary at times.8 The strongest correlations
were between ignoring pain sensations and task persistence, distraction and task persistence,
distraction and coping self-statements.8
One study found a highly significant correlation (p<.001) between patients with family members
with at least one disability and occurrence of CTD.9 52% of CTD patients had at least one family
member who was disabled, while only 15% of the control group (asymptomatic workers) had a
disabled family member. The authors of the study conjectured that a “disabled” support system
may serve to support and maintain disability in CTD patients.9 Disabled family members may be
serving as role models for pain and illness behaviors and disabled family members may reinforce
these behaviors when they are displayed by the CTD-injured person.9
We recognize that there can be a lot of frustration when doctors cannot resolve a problem and
they refer patients to psychological therapy. Patients may feel that their doctors have simply not
tried hard enough and want to get them out of their office.10 They may feel that pain medications
should be prescribed more liberally and long-term.10 And in some cases, it may be the patient
that decides they have endured enough testing to conclude that further probing is fruitless, there
are no medical answers, and learning to live with pain is the best solution.
Most importantly, both CBT and Mindfulness based approaches have been equally successful in
significantly improving both pain levels and functionality over patients who received only
medical care in a study of back pain. Controlled studies have shown that mindfulness training is
possibly as effective or more effective as CBT in helping some patients deal with a large number
of chronic physical and psychological problems. More research is needed to identify which
individuals would benefit more from one approach or the other.11
People with existing psychiatric problems and trauma may experience difficulties with
mindfulness meditation, so in these cases, it should be undertaken only with an adequately trained
professional.12 Overall, since meditation has been in practice for at least 2600 years, there should
be little fear that it will harm most people and in a majority of people, it has been shown to be
very helpful.13 CBT is nothing more than trying to determine existing patterns and to make
positive life and mental changes; certainly a good practice for everyone!
3
Research on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) focuses
on solutions, challenging and modifying
dysfunctional emotions, behaviors, and
thoughts. 14 Studies have shown that cognitive-
behavioral intervention either alone or in
combination with multidisciplinary treatment
can be very helpful in reducing pain, depression,
and disability through teaching better coping
strategies, relaxation, anger management,
frustration, and other emotional responses.9,15
Learning to deal with pain and can break the
cycle of negative reactions that lead to further
disability. The following diagrams show two
different types of response to pain with the
physical and psychological cycles that are
involved. The top diagram demonstrates the
negative pain cycles that lead to deconditioning,
reduced activity and involvement, depression,
and anger. The bottom diagram shows the
possible positive approach to dealing with pain through a multidisciplinary approach including
CBT. The positive approach leads to strength, greater activity and involvement, reduced pain,
and emotions of happiness, well-being, and relaxation.16,17 By gradually increasing activity and
replacing negative thoughts with hopeful thinking, the responses to pain are reprogrammed.
4
Diagrams courtesy of References 16, 17
CBT has been shown to work through either individual or group counseling, alone or in
combination with traditional rehabilitation programs in as few as 5 sessions.9, 15, 18 A review of 23
years of research on cognitive-behavioral therapy in treatment of pain-related dysfunction, was
shown to improve the physical symptoms in 71% of the studies and a trend of improvement in
11% more studies.18 Reduction in psychological distress and improvements in functional status
was generally somewhat less, but advantages were shown for both of these as well. Results
appear to be long-lasting over months or even years and may enable people to return to work
successfully.9,19 Certain types of pain may not be benefited as much as others.20
5
observation of fleeting thoughts and
corresponding body sensations without
reacting to any experience.22 Without
mindfulness, the theory is that sensations of
pain are perceived and it leads unavoidably
to some negative corresponding body
sensations and automatic mindless reactions
based on your past experience with this pain
and your attempts to cope.13,23 People who
suffer chronic pain have brains that are
actually developed to be more tuned into
pain and sensitive to pain.23 Studies found
that preventing these reactions while
remaining fully aware and accepting bodily
experiences leads to a rapid extinction of
conditioned responses, whatever the nature
of the disorder.13 After just a few sessions of
mindfulness meditation, brain scans show
that the pain, stress, and self-centered
thought parts of the brain are calmed significantly.6,23 By paying attention to the various levels of
the experience, objectively attending to the physical, emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and
interpersonal aspects, sufferers discover new perspectives on the problem.22 Jon Kabat-Zinn has
found that not only are new insights gained, but by doing this, the patient gains greater sense of
self-control, self-efficacy, and well-being.22 The sensations of pain are greatly reduced and the
thinking patterns associated with pain are reduced or eliminated.6
In Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, maladaptive thoughts are replaced with adaptive or positive
thoughts. Mindfulness therapy involves disengaging from the thoughts entirely.24 It encourages
simple observation of all thoughts, positive and negative, along with physical sensations. 24
Patients can learn that often their thoughts in response to a symptom make the sensation much
worse, so by learning to eliminate the thoughts associated with the pain, you can eliminate the
agony.24 While on the surface, doing nothing seems like it is just ignoring the pain, in fact it is
exactly the opposite. It is learning to feel the pain, acknowledge it, and move through it.
6
CBT Basics: Identifying pain triggers, setting goals, handling emotions, and stress
Identifying triggers. A diary is an important way to
identify behavioral and social factors that may be
influencing pain.4 Record the following things at the
same three times of day every day, morning, noon, and
bedtime.4 This may seem burdensome because we often
feel like we are quite familiar with our pain, but after a
while it will probably become apparent that some times
of day are better, some situations may be correlated, and
sometimes we may be surprised that there is almost no
pain at all. It may also may make the pain feel worse
because attention is drawn to it rather that coping
through denial.4
• Date and time
• Situation
• Sensation rating 0-10 (and average that day)
• Physical sensation description
• Emotional response 0-10 (and average that day)
• Emotional response description
• Action taken (medications, yoga, etc.)
Educate yourself. Learn about your condition so you know more about the causes and treatments
that can help you.1 Explore alternative therapies that may help you.1
Set goals. Pain often causes people to feel like they cannot
accomplish anything, but by setting some goals and reaching for
them. Set a few short-term goals daily, weekly, or within the
next 2-3 months. There are five components to setting goals:
• Measureable, so you know when you reach it.
• Realistic, even when you are in pain.
• Specific actions or steps to take
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• Personal, with you being the one responsible for reaching the steps or goals
• Desirable so making the effort is truly meaningful.
Reward yourself for goals met!1
If you know what you want to accomplish, but have been unable to achieve your goals, try to
identify things that are prohibiting progress. 4
• Identify emotions that are preventing progress: inability to keep up, fear of pain or injury,
feeling overwhelmed.
• Confront negative self-talk.
• Break big goals into small steps that allow you to inch your way forward.
• Make contingency plans in case you run into problems. If you try to do too much back
off a bit. Give yourself time and space to relax and rest.
Developing healthy attitudes. Work toward attitudes that are traits of survivors.4
• Stress hardiness. The feeling that you have the ability to overcome challenges and
stressors.
• Optimism. Expect that things will turn out OK and that bad things do not dominate over
the good things.
• Empathy. Nonjudgemental awareness of another’s experience.
• Altruism. After learning to pace yourself, become involved in something that connects
you to other people’s lives and the community.
• Affirmations. List your strengths, talents, and achievements.1 Remember what it was
like before you were injured, what brought you joy. 1 Describe how you felt physically
and what you were like as a person.1 Record hopes, dreams, ambitions by writing them
down or with a voice recording.1
Make sure you realize that your self-worth is not related to your productivity. Rest is completely
important as is the ability to play, feelings of whimsy and wonder. Your worth is not measured
by how quickly you wear yourself out.25 Simplifying your life and prioritizing what is important
to you is the best way to bring clarity and reduce overwhelm26 Maybe you need less stuff and
less obligations. Choose what is most important and eliminate everything else.26
Pay attention to self-talk. We all do it…those thoughts that replay themselves in our heads. They
are voices of parents, teachers, co-workers, bosses, and friends from the past that can make or
break our attitudes toward ourselves, our capabilities, our goals, our achievements, and our
limitations.4 When you are in pain, self-talk can become very negative and lead to self-pity or
self-blame, or it can cause you to plow through the pain as if it didn’t exist. It is important to pay
attention to what we are telling ourselves and to feel the pain and make changes to plans or
otherwise accommodate our needs.4 The following three techniques can be used to deal with
negative self-talk:4
• Challenge it
• Clarify the problem and deal with what you can do about it
• Address it with a “so what” attitude. In other words, face the reality of the worst that
could happen and realize that failing to do something because of pain or worrying about
your impression on others is of no real importance.
Reduce factors that lead to pain and pace yourself. Part of the reason for keeping a diary is to
enable you to detect patterns in your life and hopefully determine things that cause flare-ups.
Rather than pushing through pain and suffering the frustration and loss of control when you
overdo it, learn to lessen the factors that you know will cause pain.4 If it takes a day or more to
8
recover, you are probably overdoing it, but it is important to distinguish between pain that is
related to improving fitness and pain that is causing harm.4 Fear of pain and fear of harming
yourself can keep some people inactive, so learn what muscle fatigue and soreness are like and
realize that is part of what will make you stronger. But also learn what the soreness and pain are
that are associated with a flare-up of an injury.4 In general, gentle, slow movements, stretching
exercises, and movements that don’t require a lot of pounding, jolting, or strain on joints is
generally good. Water exercises eliminate 70% of the effects of gravity and can be very
beneficial.4
It has been found that there is a tendency to work until a point of pain tolerance is reached and
then there is a period of rest.9 This “pain cycling” pattern becomes habitual with periods of work
and rest decreasing in length. By pacing activities and taking breaks based on a time interval
rather than waiting for excessive pain, people can often tolerate activities in shorter intervals.
There are three ways of modifying activities to accomplish more and feel better:4
• Pacing. Break down tasks into parts and don’t do the whole task at once.
• Adaptation. Find different ways to do a task that are less painful: sit rather than stand,
use adaptive gadgets, learn to use a different type of grip.
• Delegation. Trade tasks with someone else is something is causing you pain
These things can be hard to do at work, but in some jobs, it is possible.4
Handling emotions, stress, fatigue, and self-talk. Make sure your life is rich in things you enjoy:
hobbies, music, pets, children, journaling, clothing you love, things that make you laugh (comics,
books, movies, TV).1 Use visualization, biofeedback, relaxation exercises, breathwork, and pet
therapy to help you relax, overcome stress, and negative emotions.1
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• Information
• Analysis of the problem
• Advice
• Understanding and sympathy
• Reassurance
If you are in pain, you need to describe it clearly.4 Has your pain increased or decreased? Has
the location of the pain changed? Are there any new symptoms? What seems to help or make the
pain worse? What doesn’t help?
Take a complete list of all medications, supplements, and herbal supplements along with the
dosages.4
Be assertive and speak up. It may help to make a list of questions to ask before your appointment
so you don’t forget to ask. And take notes during the appointment so you will remember all the
answers and advice.4
Preparing ahead and tracking what works. Have a crisis plan so that
during times of intense pain, directions are ready for family and friends
so they can help you without being told or asked.1 Make sure you have
people you can call on for support. Your circle of support should
ideally already know exactly what their role is and what they should do
when you are incapacitated.1
Medication. If certain medications help during flare-ups, have them on hand so you can use them
when necessary. Beware of NSAIDs and use them rarely because they cause gastric ulcers,
increased bleeding, and kidney problems.1 And, although opioids have been the go-to drug for
pain management, it is quite addictive for most people and has been overprescribed to the point of
causing thousands of overdose deaths.27 An average 130 Americans die every day from opioid
overdose! Over time, increased dosage is required to achieve the same results and withdrawal
from these drugs is difficult and uncomfortable.28
We are fortunate to live in a time that is allowing the use of cannabis for pain relief because it is
highly effective and avoids virtually all of the undesirable side effects of other prescription and
over-the-counter drugs. In some states THC is still illegal, but CBD, the non-psychoactive
cannabis product, is available without prescription in all states in America. THC is the most
potent component anti-inflammatory component of cannabis.29 In combination with various
CBD strains and high CBG products, it can be used to reduce inflammation, pain from
osteoarthritis, and migraines.29 For low back pain, high CBD topical products such as creams or
transdermal patches applied directly to the painful area are very effective as are edibles, tinctures,
or vaporizing high CBD strains.29 THC, although effective in dealing with inflammation, can
cause anxiety. 29 Anxiety increases inflammation, so if THC causes anxiety, it should be reduced
or a CBD-only product should be used.29 For extensive information on using cannabis for pain
relief, refer to the Resources section at the end of this article
10
Healthy lifestyle.
• Don’t smoke.30 We don’t have to tell you how unhealthy smoking is for your health, do we?
Yes, it has a lot to do with your pain, with reduced cardiovascular functioning, bone health,
and the progression of musculoskeletal problems. 30
• Eat an anti-inflammatory diet. Read our article on inflammation to understand the foods that
you should and shouldn’t eat. Lose weight if you need to. Excessive body mass is
significantly associated with chronic pain as well as many other debilitating and life-
threatening illnesses.30
• Drink plenty of water. 31 Drink at least 32 oz. of water every day to keep body tissues
hydrated.
• Exercise. Cardiovascular fitness is highly associated with overall health and with a positive
outlook on life. Find a form of exercise that you enjoy, that will not aggravate your
symptoms and make it a part of every day.31,32 When you are in pain, you might feel like
skipping exercise, do a form of exercise that is gentler like yoga, tai chi, or qi gong on those
days. If your body is out of shape, you may feel more pain the first few weeks, but it’s
probably not because your chronic pain is worse.31 Even with severe back pain, physical
activity is advised as standard practice to improvement.30 Walking is something most people
can accomplish even on bad days.
• Get plenty of sleep.30,31 For most people the amount of sleep they get is closely linked to
mood and pain. Sleep allows the body to heal and restore hormone levels. Get at least 6
hours of sleep and use exercise to ensure sound sleep, staying away from drugs and foods that
disrupt sleep (eg. Coffee, tea, sleeping pills, alcohol). Cannabis products, especially edibles
can greatly improve the quality of sleep when pain, anxiety, and stress are involved.
Acupuncture
Acupuncture has been shown to be effective in reducing chronic pain in studies which compared
acupuncture vs. no acupuncture OR acupuncture vs. sham acupuncture, though results are quite
limited.33 Sham acupuncture generally involves the use of penetrating needles in sites that are
not related to treatment sites so that the patient experiences the needles, but is not aware that no
treatment is actually being performed. In studies comparing no acupuncture to acupuncture, it is
obvious to the patient when treatment is being performed, so bias is likely. Analysis of 39 trials
with over 20,827 patients concluded that acupuncture is superior to both sham and no
acupuncture for chronic pain associated with musculoskeletal pain, osteoarthritis, chronic
headache, or shoulder pain.33
Another analysis of studies concluded that the effectiveness of acupuncture is sustained quite well
over time so that 50% to 90% of the benefit endures even after a 12 month period.34
RESOURCES:
Websites:
American Chronic Pain Association (ACPA)
http://www.theacpa.org/
11
National Association of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapists (NACBT)
Search for a therapists certified by NACBT near you:
http://nacbt.org/searchfortherapists.asp
Free online guided imagery associated with the book above: www.guilford.com/managepain
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This article and all of our articles are intended for your information and education. We are not experts in
the diagnosis and treatment of specific medical or mental problems. When dealing with a severe problem,
please consult with a healthcare or mental health professional and research the alternatives available for
your particular diagnosis prior to embarking on a treatment plan. You are ultimately responsible for your
own health and treatment!
***********************************
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