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Tag Archive for: brain on fire

Posts

treating chronic pain

Treating Chronic Pain

September 6, 2023/in Long Covid, Treatments/by Gary Kaplan, DO

The number of patients diagnosed with chronic pain conditions continues to rise in the United States, topping 51 million in 2021. 1

Chronic pain is defined as pain that lasts for more than 3 months, a time frame that under normal circumstances should accommodate the body’s normal healing process. But when the body doesn’t respond how we expect it to, lives can quickly be interrupted, and for many, it can be life-shattering.

Chronic pain is treatable and there are many effective options available, so why are millions of people being left behind?

One of the biggest challenges in diagnosing and managing chronic pain is the fact that providers have to rely almost exclusively on the individual’s description of their pain and the disability it causes. Pain is subjective – there is no biomarker, blood test, or imaging study that can objectively detect the presence and severity of pain.

However, research that looks at the way our brains and nervous systems initiate and sustain severe chronic pain continues to point to the same conclusion – that chronic pain, in and of itself, is not the problem to be treated. Instead, chronic pain should be seen as a symptom of an underlying medical problem, and it is to this underlying problem that treatment must be targeted.

Specifically, chronic pain is a symptom of inflammation in the brain, or what I call “a brain on fire”. This inflammation is triggered by the body’s own immune system, which is designed to respond to any kind of assault. For example, physical injury, infections (such as Lyme disease or COVID-19), exposure to environmental toxins, concussions, celiac disease, loss of oxygen to the brain caused by sleep apnea, and even long-term emotional trauma, can set off an inflammatory response in the brain and central nervous system. Identifying the source(s) of inflammation is critical to breaking the cycle of chronic pain; and frequently, the sources are multiple, compounding, and cumulative.

To accurately diagnose and treat the causes of neuroinflammation that manifest as chronic pain, providers must:

  • Take a comprehensive medical history of each individual.
  • Work to correctly identify and treat the underlying root cause(s) of chronic pain.
  • Educate people about their relationship with chronic pain. Like all relationships, how this is managed can make life substantially better or worse.

Pain Management Programs

Intensive pain management programs can be an extremely important tool in helping patients manage their pain and live a better life. They typically involve a treatment schedule that spans several weeks, during which time attendees are typically seen by a team of healthcare providers with a variety of specialties. Although programs vary somewhat from one to another, each is likely to include:

  • Initial consultation with a provider who has pain management experience.
  • Specialized lab tests.
  • Nutritional intervention, including anti-inflammatory elimination diets and consultations with nutrition experts.
  • Behavioral health techniques, such as meditation and relaxation therapies.
  • Acupuncture.
  • Movement therapies, such as yoga (especially restorative yoga and yogic philosophy training), and physical therapy, including core strengthening and biomechanics.

The goal of this type of intense programming with an emphasis on education is to help individuals think differently about their pain while providing them with new tools to manage their pain and re-engage in their lives. Additionally, if the programs are designed to approach pain as a symptom of an underlying medical condition and the treatment aims to resolve the root cause of the pain, there is a very good possibility that the pain will go away.

The Bottom Line

  1. Chronic pain is not a disease but a symptom.
  2. The way we treat pain now has, for the most part, been a costly, abysmal failure. Opioids are the most pressing issue but there are also serious concerns about the number of unsuccessful and unnecessary procedures (surgeries in particular) and the proliferation of the use of dorsal column stimulators (implanted electronic devices placed near the spinal cord to treat chronic pain), and the overutilization of spinal blocks (injections of anesthetic into the spine). The research evidence for these approaches for the treatment of chronic pain ranges from fair to poor. 2,3,4,5
  3. Behavioral health programs have some of the strongest data and the greatest success in treating chronic pain conditions. And, more importantly, when these programs are not successful, they don’t make the situation worse (unlike surgery and other invasive procedures).

What Needs to Happen

Individuals suffering from chronic pain must, in every single case, be offered a comprehensive workup with an individualized treatment approach.

We need to continue with research into the causes of inflammation in the brain, while also working on developing a treatment for brain inflammation that leads to chronic pain. We also need to develop testing that will provide us with an objective indicator of the chronic pain/underlying disease and its response to treatment.

In the interim, we should focus on improving the lives of our patients by using targeted therapies that address the biology of the pain, rather than its symptoms; anything short of this is like putting a Band-Aid on a bullet hole.

–Dr. Gary Kaplan

Sources:

1. Rikard SM, Strahan AE, Schmit KM, Guy GP Jr.. Chronic Pain Among Adults — United States, 2019–2021. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2023;72:379–385. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm7215a1.

2. PMID: 24308846
3. PMID: 25840040
4. PMID: 26824399
5. PMCID: PMC3777049

Long-COVID Recovery Program

Our Long-COVID Recovery Program provides comprehensive care to patients who still have COVID-19 symptoms more than six weeks after recovering from the initial infection. If you are experiencing symptoms beyond six weeks of being diagnosed, please give us a call at 703-532-6302.

More Info

 

We are here for you, and we want to help.

Our goal is to return you to optimal health as soon as possible. To schedule an appointment please call: 703-532-4892 x2

 

This article was originally published in September 2016. It was reviewed and updated in September 2023.

depression_pain

Is Depression Ever Just Depression?

May 10, 2023/in Inflammation, Long Covid, Mental Health/by Gary Kaplan, DO

A modified model for understanding depression and anxiety ought to involve a whole person, integrative approach.

Public acts of violence seem to fill the news media streams these days and are typically followed by outcries for greater access to mental health care for those that need it most. And although almost all individuals with serious mental illness are not dangerous, many of the perpetrators of these heinous crimes later turn out to have a documented history of depression or mental illness, which often went untreated.

So, what can we do to stop the anguish? What is it that we are missing?

The Cost of Failure

Unfortunately, the number of Americans affected by serious depression and anxiety disorders is enormous, as are the costs to society due to failure to treat and/or treatment failure. Tens of millions of Americans suffer from depression, including chronic, low-grade depression (dysthymia) and anxiety. 21 million of those Americans have been diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD), the leading cause of disability for people ages 15 to 44.

The cost of failing to effectively treat these conditions is not just the individual’s inability to complete college, hold a job or cultivate positive relationships; it also includes the toll taken on an entire family and community when a despairing person takes their own life. And in other cases, the costs of acts of public violence – in terms of suffering, municipal expenses, personal medical and legal expenses, and lost human potential – are immeasurable.

Michael, a 17-year-old high school student, came to see me with a long history of hospitalizations after attempting to take his own life. Despite undergoing intensive psychiatric treatment, he remained depressed and suicidal. Like 40 percent of those who suffer from major depressive disorder, Michael was not responding to treatment.

When contemplating a situation like Michael’s, the question “What am I missing?” is never far from my mind. Statistics show that only about one-third of patients with MDD respond to antidepressant medication, with about the same number responding to psychotherapy alone. If we combine the two approaches the numbers improve slightly, but the fact remains that most people with MDD respond only partially to medical interventions, with almost half remaining entirely unresponsive.

A Central Nervous System in Turmoil

There is a mountain of scientific research demonstrating that neuropsychiatric conditions such as depression, anxiety disorders, and possibly bipolar disease are, in a very high percentage of cases, the result of inflammation occurring in the brain.

There is a great deal of research linking generalized inflammation to heart disease, chronic pain, and obesity. Inflammation in the body takes many forms: When we have an allergic response to pollen or food, our bodies’ inflammatory response includes the release of histamine, which makes our eyes itch and noses run; we see the inflammation associated with a skin wound when the white cells of our immune system respond to a bacterial infection. Inflammation in our brains, however, is unique in that it is mediated by tiny cells called microglia.

Microglia are the innate immune system of the central nervous system (CNS). Their job is to respond to trauma and damage to the brain. In response to brain injury, the microglia release a virtual symphony of chemical mediators that orchestrate the destruction of bacterial invaders, the elimination of damaged neuronal tissue, and the initiation of the repair process.

After responding to an assault on the brain, microglia typically return to a resting state. But ongoing and cumulative assaults to the brain will cause the microglia to remain chronically up-regulated, causing them to continuously spew out inflammatory, tissue-destroying chemicals. Examples of ongoing assaults include fever, physical assault, and emotional trauma. It can also be infections like Lyme disease or COVID-19.

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers have been studying how the SARS-CoV-2 virus affects the CNS as well as other body systems. What they are finding out is that it too heightens the activity of microglia leading to the release of inflammatory cytokines and a sequence of damaging events that can affect the brain and have other long-term effects on health.

Brain inflammation can produce a wide range of symptoms including depression, anxiety, chronic pain, difficulty focusing and concentrating, fatigue, and sleep disturbances.

Further compounding the issue is the fact that a solid understanding of the role of microglia in brain health is sadly lacking among most medical professionals, with the result that they continue to treat what are in fact “symptoms” as separate and unique “diseases.”

Looking Beyond the Symptoms

A better framework, where physicians look beyond the symptoms, involves giving priority to the discovery of the root causes of an individual’s depression or anxiety. This primarily requires an understanding of what caused the microglia to up-regulate.

Research has shown that anything that can damage neuronal tissue can be a trigger. So, an exploration of a patient’s depression may include asking them about possible traumatic head injuries, psychological traumas (acute events and chronic stress), infections (as mentioned above, tick-borne diseases, other bacteria, and viruses like Covid-19), and even biotoxins that may have entered the body from exposure to toxic molds, celiac disease, and hypoxia (usually related to sleep apnea). The list of triggers is long, and as such, the process of identifying the possible underlying causes of the disease requires putting together a thorough medical health timeline for each patient. By using this approach, treatment options expand due to the greater understanding of the origin of the illness, thereby increasing prospects for recovery.

As for Michael, my 17-year-old patient who was depressed and suicidal, it turned out that he has celiac disease. But how could a food allergy be related to his depression? Celiac disease is far more than an allergy to gluten – it is a very serious autoimmune disorder that’s triggered when even the smallest amount of gluten is ingested. As we know, with autoimmune disorders the immune system mistakenly attacks the body’s normal cells. In the case of celiac disease, when gluten is consumed the immune system goes into attack mode and causes damage to the healthy villi of the gut lining. Villi are responsible for absorbing nutrients and keeping food particles and toxins from entering the bloodstream. When the gut lining is compromised and toxins enter the bloodstream, widespread inflammation can occur, and this inflammatory response can affect more than the digestive system – it can cause inflammation in the brain. Research shows that people with celiac disease are at greater risk of neurological damage and mental health issues in addition to other serious chronic health conditions.

Michael, now gluten-free, is no longer depressed and he has re-engaged in life. He continued with antidepressant medications for a period of time, but slowly weaned himself from them under medical supervision (it takes time for the brain to heal after the assault is removed). His life has been changed, for the better, forever.

It is my hope that, with a modified model for understanding depression and anxiety, involving a “whole” person, integrative approach, more patients will be correctly diagnosed and treated, as Michael was. In his case, and I suspect in many more, we’re learning that all too often, depression is not just depression.

This article originally appeared in US News and World Reports, May 12, 2015. It was reviewed and updated in May 2023.

We are here for you, and we want to help.

Our goal is to return you to optimal health as soon as possible. To schedule an appointment please call: 703-532-4892 x2

Additional references

InformedHealth.org [Internet]. Cologne, Germany: Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG); 2006-. Depression: How effective are antidepressants? [Updated 2020 Jun 18]. 

Mohammadkhanizadeh A, Nikbakht F. Investigating the potential mechanisms of depression induced-by COVID-19 infection in patients. J Clin Neurosci. 2021 Sep;91:283-287. doi: 10.1016/j.jocn.2021.07.023. Epub 2021 Jul 20. PMID: 34373041; PMCID: PMC8289699.

Dr. Gary Kaplan Speaking at the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine Conference

February 20, 2020/in News/by Kaplan Center

Dr. Gary Kaplan has been invited to speak at the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine’s (A4M) Conference in Los Angeles, CA. Several educational workshops/modules will be offered to attendees; topics include Hormone Replacement Therapy, cardiovascular health, peptide therapies, and autoimmune disease.

Dr. Kaplan is participating in Module VI, “DRIVERS OF IMMUNE SYSTEM AND MITOCHONDRIAL DYSREGULATION”; his presentation is titled, “Redefining Chronic Pain: Etiologies, Immunology, and Mitochondrial Dysfunction”.

About Module VI

More than 50 million individuals living within the U.S. now suffer from one or more autoimmune illness and 80% are women. Thirty years ago only one in 400 people developed an autoimmune illness but today one in 12 within the U.S. and one in nine women are diagnosed with an autoimmune illness. Currently, there are 100+ autoimmune disorders all caused by the common thread of autoimmunity. Why the radical change in incidence? Module VI will review the various etiologies of modern-day living that are skyrocketing the incidence of immune and mitochondrial dysregulation and inflammation leading to the clinical manifestations of autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue syndrome, pain, and sleep dysregulation.

About A4M

The American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine (A4M) is dedicated to the advancement of tools, technology, and transformations in healthcare that can detect, treat, and prevent diseases associated with aging. A4M further promotes the research of practices and protocols that have the potential to optimize the human aging process. A4M is comprised of 26,000 members across the globe, including physicians, health care practitioners, scientists, and governmental officials, all of whom collectively represent over 120 nations.

For more information, visit A4M.com.

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