Role of Age & Gender in Pain
Need to summarize &
edit.
What is the role of age and gender in
pain?
Gender and Pain
It is now widely believed
that pain affects men and women differently. While the sex hormones estrogen and testosterone certainly play a
role in this phenomenon, psychology and culture, too, may account at least in
part for differences in how men and women receive pain signals. For example,
young children may learn to respond to pain based on how they are treated when
they experience pain. Some children may be cuddled and comforted, while others
may be encouraged to tough it out and to dismiss their pain.
Many investigators are turning their attention to the study of gender
differences and pain. Women, many experts now agree, recover more quickly from
pain, seek help more quickly for their pain, and are less likely to allow pain
to control their lives. They also are more likely to marshal a variety of
resources-coping skills, support, and distraction-with which to deal with their
pain.
Research in this area is yielding fascinating results. For example, male
experimental animals injected with estrogen, a female sex hormone, appear to
have a lower tolerance for pain-that is, the addition of estrogen appears to
lower the pain threshold. Similarly, the presence of testosterone, a male
hormone, appears to elevate tolerance for pain in female mice: the animals are
simply able to withstand pain better. Female mice deprived of estrogen during
experiments react to stress similarly to male animals. Estrogen, therefore, may
act as a sort of pain switch, turning on the ability to recognize pain.
Investigators know that males and females both have strong natural
pain-killing systems, but these systems operate differently. For example, a
class of painkillers called kappa-opioids is named after one of several opioid
receptors to which they bind, the kappa-opioid receptor, and they include the
compounds nalbuphine (Nubain) and butorphanol (Stadol). Research suggests that
kappa-opioids provide better pain relief in women.
Though not prescribed widely, kappa-opioids are currently used for relief of
labor pain and in general work best for short-term pain. Investigators are not
certain why kappa-opioids work better in women than men. Is it because a woman's
estrogen makes them work, or because a man's testosterone prevents them from
working? Or is there another explanation, such as differences between men and
women in their perception of pain? Continued research may result in a better
understanding of how pain affects women differently from men, enabling new and
better pain medications to be designed with gender in mind.
Pain in aging and pediatric populations: special needs and
concerns
Pain is the number one complaint of older Americans, and one
in five older Americans takes a painkiller regularly. In 1998, the American
Geriatrics Society (AGS) issued guidelines (Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society (1998; 46:635-651) for the management of pain in older people. The AGS
panel addressed the incorporation of several non-drug approaches in patients'
treatment plans, including exercise. AGS panel members recommend that, whenever
possible, patients use alternatives to aspirin, ibuprofen, and other NSAIDs
because of the drugs' side effects, including stomach irritation and
gastrointestinal bleeding. For older adults, acetaminophen is the first-line
treatment for mild-to-moderate pain, according to the guidelines. More serious
chronic pain conditions may require opioid drugs (narcotics), including codeine
or morphine, for relief of pain.
Pain in younger patients also requires special attention, particularly
because young children are not always able to describe the degree of pain they
are experiencing. Although treating pain in pediatric patients poses a special
challenge to physicians and parents alike, pediatric patients should never be
undertreated. Recently, special tools for measuring pain in children have been
developed that, when combined with cues used by parents, help physicians select
the most effective treatments.
Nonsteroidal agents, and especially acetaminophen, are most often prescribed
for control of pain in children. In the case of severe pain or pain following
surgery, acetaminophen may be combined with codeine.
* Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (1998; 46:635-651).
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