Der Schmerz
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The analgesic effectiveness of physical therapy in rheumatology is dependent on the differentiated clinical picture (joint, soft parts, spinal column, musculature) and on the differentiated therapeutic remedy (intensity, duration of single treatments, frequency, duration of therapeutic series). Physico- and kinesitherapy can be distinguished with regard to objective and subjective doses; manual therapy is between them. ⋯ The problem "rheumatism and pain" mainly exists at the level of "chronic"; diagnostics of movement function (articular and muscular functions) on one hand and dosage of therapeutic remedies (drugs and remedies of physiotherapy) on the other are the guidelines. Course (rehabilitation) as well as onset (prevention) of rheumatic clinical pictures determine the further strategy of pain therapy.
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Oral medication is the simplest way in treatment of chronic pain. For cancer pain oral analgesics are efficacious in more than 90% of the patients. When a causal therapy of pain (e.g. chemotherapy, operation) fails an analgesic ladder with oral analgesics is instituted. ⋯ In any state of pain the response to the different groups of drugs should be evaluated first. Then a stepwise pharmacological approach should be performed. In most cases pain can be treated effectively by oral drugs.
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Psychodynamic concepts postulate a psychogenesis of physical pain proposing several assumptions about the conversion of mental suffering into physical pain. Behavioural concepts, on the other hand, emphasize psychological conditions as risk factors for chronicity and describe psychological reactions to chronic pain. Patients with painful diseases and inadequate coping strategies very often display symptoms of anger, anxiety, or depression. ⋯ Subjects included in the study were given diagnoses of low back pain, tension headache, rheumatoid arthritis, and ankylosing spondylitis. Treatment effects in different diagnostic groups were compared to each other, supporting the assumption that pain reduction is greatest in low back pain and least in ankylosing spondylitis. Subjects with inflammatory rheumatic diseases showed some improvement in self-reported physical complaints and in their feelings of well-being.