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analgesia

  (ăn'əl-jē'zē-ə, -zhə) pronunciation
n.

A deadening or absence of the sense of pain without loss of consciousness.

[Greek analgēsiā : an-, without; see a–1 + algēsiā, pain (from algein, to feel pain, from algos, pain).]

analgetic an'al·get'ic (-jĕt'ĭk) adj.
 
 
World of the Body: analgesia

In contrast to anaesthesia, which signifies loss of feeling — including such sensations as heat and cold, consciousness being optional — the Oxford English Dictionary defines analgesia as insensibility to pain; painlessness. In medical terms anaesthesia would imply the total relief of pain which is necessary for a surgical operation, while analgesia would provide a varying amount of relief for a painful condition. This difference is laboured here because of inconsistency in the use of the words by anaesthetists, for some of whom anaesthesia implies loss of consciousness — hence the insistence on the usage local (and regional, and spinal) analgesia rather than local anaesthesia. However, it is common to speak in the same breath about spinal anaesthesia and epidural analgesia, while the patch of skin insensitivity that results from cutaneous nerve damage is invariably referred to as anaesthesia. Since painlessness is the normal condition, analgesia here will refer to the relief of pain, acute or chronic, and the subject will be considered from its anatomical, physiological, pharmacological, and psychological aspects.

The anatomical approach implies the relief of pain by surgery or by injection. Nerve compression, which may occur at several sites, most commonly the sciatica that results from disc protrusion in the spinal canal, or the carpal tunnel syndrome at the wrist, can be cured by operation; and, rarely, severe intractable pain, such as trigeminal neuralgia, which affects the face, may, as a last resort, be treated by division or destruction of the appropriate nerve. Analgesia may also be produced by the injection of a local anaesthetic, generally into the epidural space around the spinal cord, for the relief of pain in childbirth, or when analgesia is required for some days after an operation, or after a major injury which involves fractures of the ribs.

Two recent advances in the understanding of the physiological mechanisms of pain and its suppression have suggested new approaches to pain relief, and have explained the efficacy of some very old methods. The gate control theory of pain, first proposed in 1965 by Patrick Wall (physiologist at University College, London) and Ronald Melzack, has given rise to the use of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) by means of a small battery-operated apparatus, to produce analgesia. This involves the electrical stimulation of nerves at or adjacent to the painful region, which enter the spinal cord at about the same level. It has been used with some effect for the treatment of chronic pain, and to produce relief during childbirth. The gate control theory also offers a physiological explanation for the efficacy of such psychology-laden folk remedies as rubbing the offending part; the application of cold or of counterirritants such as camphor; cupping; and moxibustion (the burning of small piles of moxa, the common mugwort, on the skin, to produce a blister).

The discovery in 1973 of opiate receptors in the central nervous system led to the search for, and discovery of, endogenous analgesic substances, the endorphins a year later, the assumption of the scientists having been that the receptors must be there for a physiological purpose. The release of these hormones at times of stress explains the phenomenon that pain may not be felt until some considerable time after the injury — the legendary footballer who continues to play with a broken leg, for example. This observation of delayed pain in the wounded, described by the Harvard anesthesiologist Henry Beecher (1907-76) during the 1943 North Africa campaign, was already well-known to earlier army surgeons. Richard Wiseman (1622-76), caring for the injured during the English Civil War, advised that wounds should be cleaned and dressed as soon as possible, before pain began to be felt. The discovery of endorphins has given rise to hopes that analgesics with more specific sites of action than opiates, and without their undesirable side-effects such as constipation, respiratory depression, and addiction, might be synthesized. Both the gate control theory and endorphin release have been invoked in attempts to give physiological respectability to acupuncture for the relief of pain.

The greatest part of pain relief, however, is dependent on pharmacological agents. The relief of acute, intermittent pain, such as during childbirth or dentistry, can be achieved rapidly and effectively by the intermittent inhalation of an analgesic gas or vapour: nitrous oxide, or until recently, when it was judged too expensive to manufacture in pure form, trichlorethylene (trilene). Otherwise pain relief involves the administration, either by mouth or by injection, of analgesic drugs. These come in gradations of effectiveness, and with different mechanisms of action, which make them more appropriate either for acute or chronic requirements. The basis of the most potent analgesics is still the opiates. Opium, the dried juice of the poppy seed capsule, is one of the oldest drugs known. It was mentioned by Homer, and by Aristotle, but until 1805, when the German apothecary Friedrich Wilhelm Sertürner (1783-1841) prepared pure crystals of the active principle — to which the French scientist Gay-Lussac gave the name morphine — it was available only as a crude, unstandardized preparation. Sertürner's researches opened the door to the isolation of many alkaloids, and eventually to the synthesis of morphine derivatives such as diamorphine (heroin), and codeine.

During the 1980s two methods of administration developed which made the patient less dependent on the attention of others; the battery operated syringe pump and electronic, fail-safe, patient-controlled systems. The first may be used when there is the need to provide continuous analgesia in advanced cancer, and the second to relieve pain postoperatively.

Of the milder analgesics, salicylic acid was isolated from willow bark, and its acetyl derivative, better known as aspirin, was prepared in 1897, and was hailed as a wonder drug for its analgesic and antipyretic (fever-controlling) properties. During the first half of the twentieth century it was used for the control of both acute pain and chronic inflammatory conditions such as rheumatic fever. For acute use it has largely been replaced by paracetamol, which came on the market in 1953 and has generally proved a safer analgesic, certainly in children.

Drugs used for the control of long-standing pain include the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS). The first of these, ibuprofen, resulted from the screening of more than one thousand compounds in the laboratories of Boots of Nottingham, and was patented in 1964. Since then a number of non-steroidals effective in chronic conditions, such as rheumatoid arthritis, have been synthesized, and have been found effective also in relieving postoperative pain. They, and also acetylsalicylic acid, act by preventing the synthesis of prostaglandins, which are to a large extent the cause of the pain, swelling, redness, and fever characteristic of inflammation.

States of ‘altered consciousness’, hypnosis, autohypnosis, euphoria, and psychosomatic conditions such as hysteria, may be accompanied by insensitivity to pain. Hypnosis has been used successfully for obstetric pain relief, and has even been able to produce the profound analgesia necessary for surgical operations, but it is a very time-consuming process. However, even such a simple measure as relieving anxiety can be effective in reducing the severity of pain. Who has not experienced the relief which comes from just making an appointment with the doctor or dentist? In recent years an attempt has been made to relieve psychologically certain — mercifully rare — states of chronic pain that are not susceptible to relief by any of the conventional methods. Often no anatomical or pathological cause can be found, and the condition becomes all-absorbing and is characterized by a state of alienation from ordinary everyday life. Attempts to produce relief have invoked research into medical anthropology — into, for example, the trance-like state which may be entered into to relieve the pain of certain initiation rites. Another approach has been to attempt to dissociate the physical pain from the sufferer's response to it, involving an attempt to rebuild a life around the pain. While much abstruse philosophy has been written about the theory behind this movement, essentially it involves listening to the sufferer, taking his symptoms seriously, and finding some means of taking his mind off them.

— David Zuck

Bibliography

  • Melzack, R. and Wall, P. (1992). The challenge of pain. Penguin Books, Harmondsworth.
  • Rey, R. (1998). The history of pain. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
  • Sneader, W. (1985). Drug discovery — the evolution of modern medicines. Wiley, Chichester

See also opiates and opoid drugs; pain.

 
Dental Dictionary: analgesia
(an′əljē′zē-ə)
n

Insensibility to pain without loss of consciousness; a state in which painful stimuli are not perceived or interpreted as pain; usually induced by a drug, although trauma or a disease process may produce a general or regional analgesia.

 

Reduced sensitivity to a normally painful stimulus with no loss of consciousness. Analgesia can be induced by a number of treatments (see acupuncture, hypnosis, drugs).

 

Absence of sensibility to pain, particularly the relief of pain without loss of consciousness; absence of pain or noxious stimulation. See also analgesic.

  • continuous caudal a. — continuous injection of an anesthetic solution into the sacral and lumbar plexuses within the epidural space to relieve the pain of parturition; also used in general surgery to block the pain pathways caudal to the umbilicus (see also caudal anesthesia).
  • epidural a. — analgesia induced by introduction of the analgesic agent into the epidural space of the vertebral canal. See also epidural.
  • infiltration a. — paralysis of the nerve endings at the site of operation by subcutaneous injection of an anesthetic.
  • intrasynovial a. — surface analgesia, produced by the introduction of a local analgesic agent into the synovial cavity and massaged into tendon sheaths.
  • intravenous regional a. — the local anesthetic agent is injected intravenously caudal to a tourniquet. The tissues below the tourniquet become anesthetized. The tourniquet and the anesthesia can be maintained for up to 15 minutes. Called also Bier block (technique).
  • local a. — injection of an anesthetic agent to create local analgesia. Includes infiltration, nerve block, epidural, intrathecal, intrasynovial, subarachnoid. See anesthesia.
  • perioperative a. — given before, during and after the surgical procedure.
  • pre-emptive a. — administration of long-lasting analgesics before surgery to help to avoid the establishment of a sensitized state and result in diminished postoperative pain.
  • regional a. — see regional anesthesia.
  • segmental a. — see segmental dorsolumbar epidural block.
  • spinal a. — injection of an analgesic agent into the spinal canal, generally either into the subarachnoid or epidural space. See also spinal anesthesia.
  • surface a. — local analgesia produced by an anesthetic applied to the surface of mucous membranes, e.g. those of the eye, nose, throat and urethra.


 
Translations: Analgesia

Dansk (Danish)
n. - analgesi, smertefrihed

Nederlands (Dutch)
afwezigheid van pijnsensaties

Français (French)
n. - analgésie

Deutsch (German)
n. - (med.) Analgesie

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ιατρ.) αναλγησία

Italiano (Italian)
analgesia

Português (Portuguese)
n. - analgesia (f) (Med.)

Русский (Russian)
обезболивание

Español (Spanish)
n. - analgesia

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - okänslighet, smärtfrihet

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
痛觉丧失, 无痛觉

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 痛覺喪失, 無痛覺

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 통각 상실

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 痛覚脱失, 無痛法

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) فقد الألم : اللاشعور بالألم من غير فقدان الوعي‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮חוסר כאב, היפסקות הכאב‬


 
 

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Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
World of the Body. The Oxford Companion to the Body. Copyright © 2001, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dental Dictionary. Mosby's Dental Dictionary. Copyright © 2004 by Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sports Science and Medicine. The Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science & Medicine. Copyright © Michael Kent 1998, 2006, 2007. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. The Veterinary Dictionary. Copyright © 2007 by Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

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