- Chapter 1 -
The Hope of a Pain-Free Life
Susan was sitting expectantly in front of me, hoping for a miracle.
As her story unfolded during our preliminary interview, I could see
why she thought a miracle was the only possible answer to her
problem.
Having suffered excruciating back and leg pain for more than seven years,
she had reached a stage where she felt hopeless about her prospects for
finding relief or resuming a normal Pain Free life. Although she was once
a vibrant nurse who had literally run about the halls of her hospital
tending to patients, her pain had reduced her to a shell of what she had
been. Now, thoroughly debilitated by chronic back pain, she couldn't
go to work. She was bedridden seven days a week; her husband even had
to carry her downstairs when she wanted to get out of bed.
The pain interrupted her rest, to the extent that she hadnt had
a
good nights sleep for years. All the activities she once enjoyed
were
now out of her reach: going to the movies, playing golf, taking vacations,
driving, or even riding in the car. Her persistent pain had
taken her life away.
As you might expect, Susan had run the gamut in her search for
medical help. She had seen physical therapists, orthopedic surgeons,
acupuncturists, chiropractors, and various pain specialists. Five years
earlier, an MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scan showed herniated
disks in her back, and as a result she had undergone back surgery.
But the pain soon returned. Another MRI showed more
degenerated disks, so she had another back operation. After that,
the pain again got better for a few monthsonly to return worse
than ever.
Then came the epidurals (shots into the thick outer covering of
the spinal cord) and nerve blocks (injections of anesthetics into
nerves to numb sensation). Again, she experienced more temporary
reliefbut the pain returned.
Seven months earlier, Susan had been evaluated and treated by
experts at a leading national health clinic, who had performed another
surgery to implant a spinal cord stimulator in her back, a procedure
that was supposed to relieve the pain.
That helped for about one month, she told me. But then
I
lifted something, and bam, my back has hurt worse ever since.
How are you feeling today? I asked. Describe your pain
on a
scale of one to ten, with ten being the worst pain you can imagine.
She sighed before beginning her litany of complaints: My lower
back pain is eight out of tentheres burning, aching, and sometimes
cramping pain. And I have sharp pain in my buttocks going
down the back of my leg. Thats the main problem. On occasion I
also get migraine headaches, and awhile back I was diagnosed with
irritable bowel syndrome.
As Susan sat on the verge of tears in my office, my mind started
racing. Her complaints were obviously chronic, and she was at her
wits end. She had seen so many physicians, but no one had been
able to cure her. Of course, she had received several diagnoses
including degenerative disk disease, herniated disks, and sciatic
neuralgia. But none of these diagnoses had led to a cure for her
pain.
In any case, countless experts had tried to help her but had fallen
short. She had submitted to more surgical procedures, injections,
X-rays, MRIs, and other diagnostic tests than most people can even
imagine. But conventional medicine had failed Susan. Her back
was still riddled with painpain that had taken all the life
out of
her life.
Beyond Body Medicine
During fifteen years of traditional medical practiceor what I now
call body medicine practiceI had seen many patients
like Susan.
Most physicians dont enjoy seeing chronic pain patients like
Susan: Theyre frustrating to us because its unclear why they
continue
to suffer, and its usually impossible to bring them out of pain
by conventional treatments.
In my former body-medicine mode, I would have given her the
conventional evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment plan. In other
words, I would have increased her dosage of pain pills, recommended
a fourth round of physical therapy, and talked to her about
a newer generation of medications that might help curb her symptoms
a bit. Then I would have sent her on her way to yet another
specialistwithout giving her any real answers or any hope that a
cure was possible.
But now I was able to understand Susans condition differently.
Her chronic back pain, headaches, and irritable bowel syndrome finally
made sense to me. I myself had once been in almost the exact
condition as Susan; I had also listened to the conventional medical
wisdom and failed to find relief from the treatment plans given to
me by modern body-medicine experts.
My personal path and research had led me out of pain and into a
new understanding of the true cause of Susans problems. Her back
pain was not related to her degenerative disks or heavy lifting; the
source of her complaints was deeper and broader and involved her
mind and body and spirit. Specifically, I determined that Susan was
suffering from symptoms related to Autonomic Overload Syndrome
(AOS)a term Ive formulated to describe the physiological process
that results in different types of chronic pain. Furthermore, the
great news about AOS is that, in most cases, patients like Susan
who suffer from this syndrome can become Pain Free.
So I spent about forty-five minutes with Susan, probing her
physical symptoms, her psychological makeup, her personality traits,
and her stresses and pressures in life. We discussed her past medical
problems, her family history, and her spiritual history. I asked her
about her personal beliefs and spiritual background, because a persons
deepest convictions and worldview can become powerful factors
in recovery from physical pain.
Early on, I noticed an important feature of her personality that
had set her up for chronic pain: her tendency to be a Perfectionist.
Susan set extremely high standards for herself and others. Her lists
of things to do were never-ending. But even though she put a lot of
pressure on herself in her professional and personal life, she usually
found that she didnt measure upand, of course, neither did
those around her. Like most Perfectionists, she became irritated
and frustrated easily. But you would never have known it, because
she had learned quite well how to stuff, or bury, her dangerous
emotions into her subconscious mind.
I dont consider myself an angry person at all, she
said. Yes, I
get frustrated and irritated with people, especially doctors. They
think theyre always right and they know everything. But of course
I dont show itIm just a nurse, and you dont tell
doctors what
you really think!
Then I gave Susan a physical examlooking for any dangerous
conditions such as cancer or neurological disorders that might explain
her pain. I tested her reflexes and her muscle tone. I pressed on
her muscles and joints, looking for areas of increased tenderness. I
have found that patients with Autonomic Overload Syndrome often
have tenderness in several specific muscles and tendons in the
back, neck, elbow, shoulder, and thigh.
During the exam, I reviewed the X-rays of her back. It was true
that these X-rays didnt look the same as those of a twenty-year-old
female. But then again, Susan was in her fifties. Radiologists had interpreted
her X-rays as herniated disks and degenerative disks
at
multiple levels. In fact, the radiologists were correct in their
assessments,
but her physicians were incorrect in concluding that
these findings were abnormal and the cause of Susans pain.
I explained to Susan that her X-ray findings would be normal in
30 percent of people in their thirties and still normal in 70 percent
of people as they get older. That is, an increasing number of people
have these conditions without any pain symptoms as they age. Most
elderly folks in nursing homes have herniated and degenerative
disks, yet nursing home residents actually have a lower incidence of
back pain than people in their thirties and forties! In my personal
experience with patients, bulging and degenerative disks are normal
findings; only rarely are they the cause of chronic back pain. Or
as I sometimes tell my patients, They are commonyes. And normal
almost always.
Finally, we returned to my office to talk.
Susan, I think I can help you, I said. I believe that
all your
symptomsyour chronic back pain, migraine headaches, and irritable
bowel syndromehave a common cause and a common solution.
I believe you can become Pain Free.
At this reassurance, she began to cry. But these were tears of
hope. Her husband, Bill, who had joined us for this final, wrap-up
part of the exam, consoled her, but he seemed rather skeptical. I
The Hope of a Pain Free Life
7
understood his doubts because I had been there myself only a short
while before. So I went into a little more detail about the scientific
and clinical explanation of the treatment I was recommending.
The Real Source of Susans Problem
I
explained to Susan and her husband that she was suffering from a pain-producing
condition that I call Autonomic Overload Syndrome. Heres a simple
definition:
Autonomic Overload Syndrome (AOS) is a group of chronic
pains and other symptoms caused by harmful levels of stress,
pressure, and repressed strong negative emotions that have built
up in the subconscious mind.
In AOS, subconscious emotions and stresses build up and overstimulate
the autonomic nervous system and related mechanisms
which control many automatic bodily functions, such as muscle
tone and hormone production. When these systems are turned to
an on position for long periods, various physical symptoms
emergemany of which involve pain. These AOS symptoms can
involve back pain, headaches, irritable bowel syndrome, insomnia,
and other complaints.
Probably the easiest way to understand AOS is to think of your
mind, body, and nervous system in terms of an automobile. A car
engine is built to travel at moderate speeds most of the time and
can generally be expected to last many years without problems. But
the car will begin to show a lot of wear and tear if we constantly step
on the accelerator and keep the speed at a hundred miles per hour
for hours at a time.
Similarly, our minds and bodies usually work well if we keep our
autonomic nervous system and fight-or-flight stress hormones at
moderate levels of activation for short periods of time. Unfortunately,
though, the stresses and pressures of modern life activate
these stress systems for extended periods. Also, when the pressure
builds, strong emotions come into play. Yet these emotions, such as
irritation, anger, guilt, fear, and shame, are dangerous and unprofessional
to express. So we tend to stuff or repress them to the subconscious
recesses of our minds. Unfortunately, though, they are
still there inside us, constantly pressing to get out and keeping our
stress system turned on.
But I had some good news for Susan and Bill. Ive learned
that
you can correct these malfunctions of your autonomic nervous system
and eliminate your painby pursuing several simple treatment
strategies, I said. These have worked for me, they have
worked for others, and they can work for you as well.
Susan Finds a Solution
After I provided her with an individualized version of my 6-week
Pain Free for Life Program (which is described in chapter 8), Susan
went home with increased hope and a can-do attitude. During the
next few weeks, she diligently applied the strategies that I had
taught herand that you will learn about in this book.
Three weeks later I received a letter from Susana message that
made my day:
It is true! she wrote. Im better! I can hardly
believe it. I can
walk without paingo down the stairsand sleep through the
night! I even turned off my spinal cord stimulator for the first time
since it was implanted.
Then came the best part: Hallelujah! I have so much to be
thankful for! I am getting my life back. My husband and I are finally
going on a tripits the honeymoon we never got to take!
I dont think that Ive ever had a patient who shouted Hallelujah!
after seeing me. And it didnt matter one bit if that shout was
on paper.
After re-reading her letter a couple of times, I sat quietly in my
office, awaiting my next appointment and musing over how I had
arrived at this remarkable juncture in my life. As a victim myself of
seemingly incurable upper and lower back pain, I had found not
only a way to overcome my own anguishbut also a methodology
to treat patients who were at the end of their rope, feeling hopeless
that they could ever escape their pain.
The Answer to Impossible Pain
The proof of the power of our program in overcoming various
symptoms of the Autonomic Overload Syndrome lies in the results
of the 6-week Pain Free for Life Treatment Program. This program
has helped hundreds of patients suffering from the chronic,
impossible-to-cure pains of AOS to achieve significant relief
within weekswithout drugs or surgery.
In a recent research project we conducted at the Brady Institute,
we studied fifty-five patients who had suffered from debilitating
and seemingly incurable chronic painall of whom I had examined
and diagnosed with Autonomic Overload Syndrome. These patients
had experienced chronic pain on average for twelve years. We
found that more than 80 percent of these subjects experienced 80
to 100 percent pain recovery within four to six weeks of beginning
our treatment plan.
Also, with the passage of time, their pain relief continued to hold
firm, according to two-month and six-month follow-up surveys.
The various AOS pain complaints that we studied and cured included
chronic back pain, fibromyalgia, chronic neck and shoulder
pain, sciatic nerve pain, migraine headaches, tension headaches,
and the painful spasms of irritable bowel syndrome. Significant
AOS-related symptoms, such as insomnia and skin conditions like
psoriasis, also frequently disappeared.
Here is a sampling of patient comments that lie behind the
numbers:
- An elderly retiree with chronic lower back pain and herniated
disks for ten years reported, Doc, I was cured in three
weeks.
- A woman in her early forties, with sciatic pain running down
her hip and leg for seven years, wrote: My sciatic pain is finally
goneI can sit in the movie theater, play tennis, and my
husband and I are going to Europe.
- An attorney in his thirties with chronic back pain for three
years declared after four weeks: Im off my medicines, and
Im 80 percent better. And Im playing golf again.
- A twenty-five-year-old female with debilitating fibromyalgia
for eight years said, Ive finally got my life back. Im
going
back to school without pain for the first time in years. Last
week I began to have a migraine headacheand I was able to
make it go away within minutes!
Such results in my practiceand also in the work of other physicians
who employ mindbody techniqueshave convinced me
that traditional medicine is too narrowly focused to help cure millions
of patients who suffer with seemingly incurable pain. I call todays
traditionally practiced medicine body medicine because we
physicians have been trained to focus almost exclusively on the
physical without giving attention to psychological or spiritual
factors that influence the body. While I believe that our current
medical practice is the best the world has ever seen, our narrow
structural focus often precludes us from solving many common
conditions. Consider just a few limitations of todays conventional
medicine:
- We will soon help the average person to live to be ninety or a
hundred . . . but millions suffer from chronic back pain
costing billions of dollars each year in health care costs and
lost work productivity.
- Body medicine can replace knees and hips and transplant kidneys
. . . but it cant offer lasting relief to millions of people,
such as the many patients, the majority of whom are women,
who suffer from the debilitating painful muscle condition
known as fibromyalgia.
- Traditional medicine can block stomach acid with pills . . .
but it cant cure gastritis or irritable bowel syndrome once
and for all, so that pills are no longer necessary.
- Conventional medicine can remove brain tumors . . . but it
cant permanently cure migraine or tension headaches.
Yet all these limitations often fall away when people in chronic
pain are examined and treated with a well-designed mindbody
spirit approach. A new and better medicine will emerge only when
patients are treated as a wholewith attention paid not just to the
body, but to the mind and the spirit as well. Yet its important
to remember
that theres really nothing new about this approach. In
fact, the seemingly new path Ive taken in my practice represents
the culmination of landmark pain-related research that has spanned
the past century and a half.
A Medical Revolution in the Making
In the past fifty to seventy-five years, modern medical technology,
research, and treatment have focused almost exclusively on the structural
or anatomical explanations of pain and disease. Tremendous
strides have been made in developing new drugs that have provided
a quick fix for many pain symptoms and complaints. But pills that
must be taken for indefinite periods are not cures. Rather,
they
provide temporary relief of chronic pains that have not been fully
corrected or fully understood.
Likewise, once such high-tech tools as the MRI and CT (computerized
tomography) scans were invented, physicians fell into another body-medicine
error when they concluded, Anything I cant
actually see must not be the cause of the pain. Or, even worse,
If I
see something that looks a little abnormal, that must be the cause of
the pain.
But actually, this heavy emphasis by physicians on treating the
bodyto the virtual exclusion of the mind and spiritis relatively
recent.* Healers among the Greeks, Hebrews, and Chinese have
always assumed that the operations of the mind, body, and spirit
were inseparable. Also, the ancients often linked negative emotions
to physical pain. Consequently, the mind and spirit, both of which
possess nonphysical dimensions, were always considered by ancient
healers in the diagnosis and treatment of pain.
More recently, we have encountered a resurgence of this ancient mindbody
emphasis in the research of Oliver Wendell Holmes, dean of the Harvard
Medical School in the midnineteenth century. This work continued
with a line of other Harvard researchers, including William James, who
explored the impact of psychology and religious faith on mental and physical
distress; Dr. Walter Cannon, who discovered the stress-producing, pain-intensifying
fight-or- flight response; and Dr. Herbert Benson, who identified the
relaxation response, which operates as a direct counter to pain and discomfort.
Clinical pain specialists, such as Dr. John E. Sarno, professor
emeritus at the Rusk Institute in Manhattan, have developed treatment
strategies focusing on neutralizing powerful negative emotions
that lie at the root of much chronic pain. At the same time,
the scientific underpinnings of mindbody interactions have become
clearer with the creative research of Dr. Candace Pert of the
Georgetown Medical School, who is a pioneer in the biomolecular
foundations of emotions. Finally, scientists such as Professor
Harold G. Koenig of the Duke University Medical Center are completing
the mindbodyspirit linkage as they examine the relationships
among disease, pain, and spiritual health.
My own effort in treating pain at the Brady Institute for Health
builds upon the research of these medical pioneers. In my work with
patientsas well as in my own personal experience with painI
have concluded unequivocally that body medicine, though wonderful
in many ways, often falls short. As a result, in my practice at
the Brady Institute, Ive developed a comprehensive mindbody
spirit strategy for evaluating and treating painful conditions associated
with the Autonomic Overload Syndromethe 6-week Pain-
Free for Life Program.
Your Parth to Freedom from Pain
Your path to a Pain Free life involves a process culminating in a
6-week treatment plan that anyone can follow. As you proceed
from this chapter to those that follow, youll most likely find yourself
moving through these stages of preparation, understanding, and
freedom:
- Evaluate. All of my patients are first evaluated thoroughly
by a
board-certified physician like me. That way, they can be confident
that their pain has not been caused by infection, cancer, aneurysm,
bone fragments, or life-threatening conditions that may be cured
by surgery or medication.
- Educate. Then youll educate yourself. Patients must understand
the true cause of their pain before they can hope for a cure
through a mindbodyspirit approach. By reading this book,
youll
learn about Autonomic Overload Syndromewhat it is, how it
works, and what symptoms it causes. Youll also learn about mind
bodyspirit interactions and how they can be employed to cure
AOS. The Pain Free for Life material has been designed to pro-
mote education along with a detailed description of practical strategies
from the Brady Institutes AOS recovery program. In addition
to this book, I offer the Freedom from Pain video series for the audiovisual
learner at www.bradyinstitute.com.
- Experience. Next, youll most likely experience an aha
moment.
As you read this book, youll probably have one of two
responses. Youll experience an insight that says: Ahathats
me
hes describing me. Or youll have the opposite reaction:
It doesnt
make sensethats not me at all. Its my hope that you
will in fact
find yourself in the patient descriptions in this book. If you do,
youll see more clearly the path you can take to find pain relief.
And
by the way, when my patients experience that ahathats me
moment,
a significant percentage of them become Pain Free within several
weeks.
- Engage. Then, youll engage in the 5-step treatment program.
This involves making a firm commitment to embark on our
6-week Pain Free for Life Program, a series of easy-to-follow,
thirty-minute daily applications of the mindbodyspirit strategies
discussed in subsequent chapters. As you monitor the steady decrease
in your painand understand more fully the Autonomic
Overload Syndrome behind ityour confidence in achieving a
Pain Free future will increase each day.
- Enjoy. Finally, youll enjoy your life again as your pain
goes
away. Youll also enjoy all the insights youve learned about
your
personality, your emotions, and your spiritual health. After finishing
the 6-week program, my patients typically feel that they are
starting to get their life backtheir Pain Free life.
In short, this Pain Free paradigm is firmly rooted in the twofold
belief that:
- Mindbodyspirit techniques can succeed where narrower,
structural diagnoses and conventional treatments have failed.
- Mindbodyspirit strategies can help you keep Pain Free
for life.
Now,
to get a better idea about how our Pain Free for
Life Program came aboutand how it can help you in a variety
of practical wayslet me introduce you to the specific ways that
it has worked in changing the life of perhaps the most challenging case
study that we have encountered so far: Dr. Scott C. Brady.
From the book PAIN FREE FOR LIFE by
Scott Brady, MD and William Proctor. Copyright © 2006 by Scott Brady,
MD. Reprinted by permission of Center Street, New York, NY. All rights
reserved.
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