One of the biggest conditions that most patients complain about is chronic pain. The conventional treatment consists of a combination of physical therapy and pain medication. The medications are usually given according to an analgesic ladder, with heavier medications prescribed for higher levels of pain. However, as many of us have discovered, the conventional treatment doesn't always work.
So what can you do if you're one of those people with chronic pain that doesn't respond to the usual treatment? There are many options available from acupuncture to yoga, but we'll focus this article on an approach called Neural Therapy. Although relatively unfamiliar to American practitioners, neural therapy is widely used in Europe for treatment of chronic pain.
Neural Therapy involves injecting local anesthetics into autonomic ganglia (nerve cell bodies), peripheral nerves, scars, glands, acupuncture points, and other tissues and anatomical sites. The history of neural therapy can be traced back to the late 19th century when local anesthetics were discovered. The Russian physiologist, Ivan Petrov, laid the foundation for the entire field in 1883 with his hypothesis that the nervous system exercises an influence over all organic functions. By the turn of the century, cocaine was being used as an anesthetic for abdominal surgery and as an epidural block. In 1904, novocaine was discovered by Alfred Einhorn. It resolved the potential for addiction found in cocaine. Novocaine is still widely used in medicine today.
A major development occurred in 1940, when Ferdinand Huneke was working with a patient that had a painful condition known as frozen right shoulder. Huneke was injecting novocaine into the right shoulder joint and finding little benefit. Instead, the patient experienced a burning, itching sensation on a seemingly unrelated scar on her lower left leg. On a hunch, Huneke injected the scar tissue with novocaine. What followed has been called the ‘Huneke phenomenon' or ‘lightning reaction'. The patient's frozen right shoulder regained full range of motion without pain in mere seconds. The scar on left shin had become an interference (inferred) field, in neural therapy terminology.
By continuing to work with local anesthetics and interference fields, Huneke and his associates created a system called neural therapy. It is used extensively for pain control in Europe, Latin America, and Russia. It is reported that up to 35% of all German physicians use neural therapy in their treatments.
Several possibilities have been given to explain why a scar on your left leg can cause pain in your right shoulder and how an injection of local anesthetic fixes the problem. One theory is called the ‘Nervous System Theory.' It states that scars have different electric potentials across the cell membrane. The electrical imbalance causes the normal ion flow in the cells to stop. The cells accumulate toxins and abnormal minerals inside the cell causing the cell to be unable to heal itself. Local anesthetic may help restore the proper ion flow, thereby allowing the cell to rid itself of toxic material, repair itself, and return to its normal function.
Another theory proposes that scar tissue acts as battery of about 1.5 volts. This electrical interference disrupts the autonomic nervous system, which lacks the protective myelin sheath coating found on most nerve cells. The continued disturbance leads to more severe problems in the body.
Another explanation is the ‘Fascial Continuity Theory.' It demonstrates that all bodily tissue is interconnected by tissue called fascia. Any scar tissue would then impair the natural movement of the fascia and result in pain.
It is quite difficult to find someone trained in neural therapy. Part of the reason is that it requires meticulous injection technique and detailed history taking. Both of these practices are very time-consuming and not in line with the fast pace demands of conventional medicine.
Therapy For Chronic Pain
You know that old adage about a prophet being without honor in his own country? Well, I was a younger relative. And even though I was a licensed nurse, this older relative of mine thought I couldn’t possibly know more than she did. I guess what I’m trying to say is she wouldn’t listen. When I started taking prednisone, she called me on the telephone.
“Suzie," she said. “Let me tell you how to take prednisone. Every other day, take an extra 5 or 10 milligrams. They’ll never know. and you’ll feel so much better than that low dose they’re giving you."
A chill ran up my spine as I realized what she had been doing for years. I made an attempt to explain to her why that was such a terrible idea, but she would have no part of it. She was blinded by her pain and suffering and thought she had discovered a ticket out. I had often suspected it, but now realized why she had so many problems. An arthritic condition, which was horrific enough on its own, was further complicated by the devastating effects of a dangerous drug. True, steroids are often necessary, but they should be taken judiciously and honestly and always the way they are prescribed.
As the years passed, her bones began to disappear. Her cervical bones shrank, she lost a toe…get the idea? In the end, her neck and head were supported by screws - more pain, more prednisone. Surgeries always became grossly complicated. She had more than one doctor, so keeping a stock of drugs on hand was not difficult. If anyone questioned her, she would lie and say she had dropped them accidentally down the drain or left them in the hotel when she was on vacation. Overwhelming infections began to assail her. A broken hip kept popping out and had to be put back into place five times over. Finally, she walked across the street to see a neighbor, not using her cane probably because she felt so “good" and didn’t believe she needed it. She fell, shattering a knee replacement. It became infected, and the infection overwhelmed her tragically compromised immune system. The adjoining bones became infected, so the knee could never be replaced.
The whole picture of her disease was too complicated and tangled in the abuse of drugs, as I am sure there was other abuse as well as the prednisone. Self-honesty lost out a long time before she died to a plastic zip-lock bag of pills taken at her discretion, not as they were intended and developed to be taken.
Dear friends, if you have more than one doctor, tell each of them what you take. Lying to yourself is not availing yourself of the medical knowledge which is out there to help you. Playing games, especially abusing prescription drugs, is like playing Russian roulette without the gun.
Both Jerry Ryan, Ph.d. & Sue Falkner Wood are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Sue Falkner Wood has sinced written about articles on various topics from Disease & illness, Aging Problems and Health. Sue's blog can be found at For more information, articles and programs about living with chronic pain please visit http://healthtalk.com/. Sue Falkner Wood's top article generates over 8100 views. to your Favourites.
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