If you or a loved one suffers from chronic pain,
then you already understand how chronic pain and illness can take their
toll.
Pain that persists and does not respond to medical
therapy impairs your ability to perform basic tasks of daily living.
It can also sap your strength and spirit, and jeopardize relationships
with the people closest to you. Understanding how pain works is an important
first step in finding a therapy that brings you relief, restoring your
ability to participate in the activities — and with the people
— you enjoy most.
Pain Is a Natural Response
Pain is the body’s natural response to
physical harm or possible damage to tissue or organs. Pain occurs when
specialized nerve endings, called pain receptors or nociceptors, are
activated by injury or illness.
There are millions of nociceptors located
throughout your body. Nociceptors can be triggered by acute or chronic
diseases, as well as various types of injury, including trauma, excessive
heat or cold, physical pressure, or chemical changes within body tissues
that signal damage
When a pain receptor is activated at the site
of the injury or illness, it triggers the release of chemical messengers
that transmit the pain message to the brain. This message is relayed
across a pain nerve pathway. The pathway begins at the nerve ending,
and is carried along the nerve fiber to where the nerve enters the spinal
cord. When the message reaches the spinal cord, it is transmitted to
the brain, which interprets the electrical impulse as the feeling we
call “pain.” This unpleasant sensation instantly prompts
you to do something to stop the source of pain.