Chronic pain in people living with dementia: challenges to recognising and managing pain, and personalising intervention by phenotype

Author:

Collins Jemima T123ORCID,Harwood Rowan H145,Cowley Alison14,Di Lorito Claudio1ORCID,Ferguson Eamonn12,Minicucci Marcos F6ORCID,Howe Louise1,Masud Tahir45,Ogliari Giulia4,O’Brien Rebecca1,Azevedo Paula S6,Walsh David A127,Gladman John R F124

Affiliation:

1. University of Nottingham , Nottingham, UK

2. NIHR Nottingham Biomedical Research Centre (BRC) , Nottingham, UK

3. University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust , Derby, UK

4. Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust , Nottingham, UK

5. NIHR Applied Research Collaboration—East Midlands , Leicester, UK

6. São Paulo State University Botucatu Medical School, , São Paulo, Brazil

7. Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust , Nottinghamshire, UK

Abstract

Abstract Pain is common in people with dementia, and pain can exacerbate the behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia. Effective pain management is challenging, not least in people with dementia. Impairments of cognition, communication and abstract thought can make communicating pain unreliable or impossible. It is unclear which biopsychosocial interventions for pain management are effective in people with dementia, and which interventions for behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia are effective in people with pain. The result is that drugs, physical therapies and psychological therapies might be either underused or overused. People with dementia and pain could be helped by assessment processes that characterise an individual’s pain experience and dementia behaviours in a mechanistic manner, phenotyping. Chronic pain management has moved from a ‘one size fits all’ approach, towards personalised medicine, where interventions recommended for an individual depend upon the key mechanisms underlying their pain, and the relative values they place on benefits and adverse effects. Mechanistic phenotyping through careful personalised evaluation would define the mechanisms driving pain and dementia behaviours in an individual, enabling the formulation of a personalised intervention strategy. Central pain processing mechanisms are particularly likely to be important in people with pain and dementia, and interventions to accommodate and address these may be particularly helpful, not only to relieve pain but also the symptoms of dementia.

Funder

Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Aging,General Medicine

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