H. Ben Taub Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX and Department of Clinical Sciences, Chicago Medical School, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, North Chicago, IL.
Pain Physician. 2024 Sep;27(7):E651-E659.
"Invariably, the self-assessed QoL was far better than I, as a physician, would have anticipated from the diseases and disabilities that you reported." -Ben Eiseman, MD, based on a survey of his octogenarian Yale University classmates.
Chronic pain control is a high priority for the elderly; it is one of the most frequently encountered medical problems in this group. Chronic pain affects 60%-75% of people aged 65 years and older. Chronic pain's prevalence is even higher in those living in assisted living or nursing homes. Based on epidemiological data, the prevalence of chronic pain is directly proportional to age and is especially so in women. At least one in 3 patients over age 65 report significant ongoing pain that is often inadequately treated. Despite this high prevalence of chronic pain in older persons, aging research sheds light on how this suffering may be reduced. Healthy aging is not an oxymoron. Successful aging and adaptation to chronic pain involve similar medical, temperamental, behavioral, and cultural factors. Older patients with chronic pain face well-documented cultural bias, fear, and clinical pessimism; but adaptive coping is a realistic expectation.
This narrative review aims to summarize the available literature on strategies used by older persons to optimize adaptation to late-life pain.
This is a narrative review of a PubMed literature search 1947 to March 4, 2024.
A PubMed literature search covering years 1947 to March 4, 2024 was performed using permutations of the search terms pain, chronic pain, persistent pain, aging, elderly, and coping. Relevant articles were also obtained from careful review of the references in articles identified in the search.
I summarized the available literature on strategies used by older persons to optimize adaptation to late-life pain. There are distinct differences between older persons and younger persons in the strategies they use to cope with chronic pain. Furthermore, I identified significant overlap between strategies and actions used by older persons to cope with pain and those strategies and actions used to successfully adapt to the aging process; these commonalities demonstrate a linkage of these adjustment processes and have clinical utility. Also presented are 2 cases that demonstrate the relevance of these factors for treating elderly patients with chronic pain.
The literature search was limited to PubMed, which excluded psychology databases.
Chronic pain is common in the elderly and is not adequately treated. Data indicate that older persons can benefit from guidance toward distinct attitudes and actions they can employ to cope with persistent pain. Epidemiologic and aging literature describe attitudes and behaviors that facilitate health and wellbeing during aging. Data from gerontology and from research on chronic pain in elderly patients converge upon factors that are common to better adaptation to both aging and late-life pain. I describe these common factors, which I categorize as treatment-factors, traits, attitudes, and actions. Two cases are presented to demonstrate these concepts.
“自我评估的生活质量总是比我作为医生根据你所报告的疾病和残疾预期的要好得多。”——本·艾斯曼(Ben Eiseman)博士,基于对他 80 岁耶鲁大学同学的调查。
慢性疼痛控制是老年人的首要任务;这是该人群中最常遇到的医疗问题之一。慢性疼痛影响 65 岁及以上人群的 60%-75%。在生活在辅助生活或疗养院的人群中,慢性疼痛的患病率甚至更高。基于流行病学数据,慢性疼痛的患病率与年龄成正比,在女性中尤为如此。至少有三分之一的 65 岁以上患者报告存在持续的严重疼痛,而这种疼痛往往得不到充分治疗。尽管老年人中慢性疼痛的患病率很高,但衰老研究揭示了如何减轻这种痛苦。健康衰老不是自相矛盾的。成功的衰老和适应慢性疼痛涉及类似的医学、气质、行为和文化因素。患有慢性疼痛的老年患者面临有据可查的文化偏见、恐惧和临床悲观情绪;但适应性应对是可以实现的期望。
本叙述性综述旨在总结老年人优化适应晚年疼痛的可用文献。
这是对 1947 年至 2024 年 3 月 4 日期间 PubMed 文献检索的叙述性综述。
使用“疼痛”、“慢性疼痛”、“持续性疼痛”、“衰老”、“老年人”和“应对”等术语的排列组合,对 PubMed 文献检索进行了搜索。还从仔细审查在搜索中确定的文章的参考文献中获得了相关文章。
我总结了老年人优化适应晚年疼痛的可用文献。老年人在应对慢性疼痛时使用的策略与年轻人有明显的不同。此外,我发现老年人应对疼痛和成功适应衰老过程中使用的策略和行动之间存在显著重叠;这些共性表明这些调整过程之间存在联系,并具有临床实用性。还介绍了两个案例,说明了这些因素对于治疗患有慢性疼痛的老年患者的相关性。
文献检索仅限于 PubMed,排除了心理学数据库。
慢性疼痛在老年人中很常见,且治疗不足。数据表明,老年人可以从指导他们采取不同的态度和行动中受益,以应对持续的疼痛。流行病学和衰老文献描述了促进健康和幸福的态度和行为在衰老过程中。来自老年学和老年患者慢性疼痛研究的数据汇集了与更好地适应衰老和晚年疼痛都相关的因素。我描述了这些共同因素,将其归类为治疗因素、特征、态度和行动。通过两个案例来说明这些概念。