HealthSheets™


Understanding Chronic Pain

Chronic means ongoing. Pain is called chronic when it lasts over a long period of time—at least 3 months. This includes pain that you feel regularly, even if it comes and goes. Chronic pain may be due to continuing injury or disease. Or it may be due to problems with the body’s pain-control system. An example of this is fibromyalgia. 

Chronic stimulus

Chronic pain may be from ongoing arousal of the body's pain system. The cause may be an untreated injury or health problem. Common examples of these are:

  • Joint degeneration (arthritis)

  • Back injury

  • Nervous system damage (neuropathic pain)

  • Headaches

With this type of pain, both the pain and the condition that is causing it must be treated.

Outline of person with arm raised showing pain cycle. The source of pain is ongoing or is not in a specific location. Pain signals move through the nerves and up the spinal cord. The brain reads the signals, but the body can't protect itself. The brain can't produce enough endorphins to control pain. Pain may persist and be harder to relieve.

Chronic pain syndrome

In some cases, no cause can be found for a person's chronic pain. Some people with chronic pain develop chronic pain syndrome. In addition to the pain, this can include:

  • Anxiety

  • Depression

  • Anger

  • Changed lifestyle

It's important to talk with your healthcare team about these. You will need treatment for these problems in addition to treatment for pain.

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