
Professor
Wall's popularising book analyses an experience that touches us all,
but which we seldom talk about. He dismisses traditional medical teachings
as myth and demonstrates the complexity of the subject in a readable
book that will increase awareness and understanding.
Pain - a compassionate science
Pain is essential, but we avoid it as much as we can. Without pain
we would die from injuries and diseases we failed to notice. Pain
is familiar, but we understand little about it; it is the most common
reason why patients visit doctors, but few of them have had much
training in the subject. After four years in medical school "the
fully qualified doctor usually emerges with only three to fours
hours of tuition on pain." That last comment is a quote from
the book and demonstrates Professor Wall's insight into the predicament
of chronic pain sufferers. He understands because he is an acknowledged
world expert on the subject. He understands deeply because he has
cancer.
Patrick Wall comes to his subject from a background in clinical
practice, academic research and scientific study. He was joint proposer
of the "gate" theory of pain and joint inventor of the TENS machine
(See Note 1). He is a thoughtful and sympathetic
man whose concern for patients comes through in this most readable
of medical books. It is a popularising book, but it is high time
someone popularised this neglected subject.
The classic understanding of pain is that pain fibres in the nerves
connect to a pain tract in the spinal chord, which communicates
with the pain centre in the brain (presumed to be the thalamus).
This brief outline is still taught to trainee doctors, but Patrick
Wall's book dismisses it as a "hundred year old myth". Pain
is far more complex, and understanding it requires an open mind
and a sympathetic attitude. Pain does not behave in predictable
and consistent patterns that can be reduced to simple formulae.
Nor does it respond identically to similar treatments in different
patients. It is affected by the patient's mind - though that does
not mean it is "in the mind" in the sense that some arrogant physicians
occasionally hint to distraught sufferers.
As a striking example of the mind's effect on the experience of
pain, the book shows a photo of President Ronald Reagan seconds
after he had been shot in the chest (1981). In the emergency
of the attempted assassination, Reagan's unconscious mind gave priority
to escape and his face displays alertness rather than agony. Not
until he was safely on his way to hospital did the President report
the pain, which proved that a bullet had entered his body. This
mental feat is not exclusive to humans, as is demonstrated by another
picture showing a racehorse winning the 1980 Epsom Derby 150 yards
after he broke a leg. Pain is a necessary response to illness or
injury, but it is neither simple nor automatic. The body's control
systems, whether human or animal, are able to edit internal nerve
messages to suit the over-riding demands of survival. Complex over-ride
systems of this kind may well be implicated in the unpredictability
of pain.
|