Apart from being either acute or chronic, pain is also described
according to its source in the body and the nociceptors, pain-detecting
neurons, which can cause ‘sympathetic’ or referred pain in other areas
of the body, or even give a feeling of pain in limbs which have been
amputated.
Cutaneous pain
This pain is related to injuries to the skin
or tissues. It is usually defined and localized pain of relatively
short duration, and may be caused by cuts, grazes, burns, lacerations
and other injuries to the skin surface.
Somatic pain
This pain is related to the ligaments, tendons, bones, blood vessels
and nerves. It is usually a dull pain and poorly localized, so that it
can be difficult for the sufferer to exactly locate where the pain is
coming from. Common causes include sprains, sports injuries, broken
bones and arthritis.
Visceral pain
This pain originates from the body’s viscera, or organs. This pain is
characterised by a dull ache, and one that can be longer lasting than
somatic or cutaneous pain. This pain is probably the hardest of all to
properly locate, and injury to an organ can even be a referred pain
that seems to occur elsewhere in the body. The best example of this is
myocardial ischaemia, which is a sudden loss of the blood supply to the
heart, usually from a blocked artery. Instead of being felt in the
heart itself, the problem can manifest as pain in the upper chest as a
restricted feeling, or as an ache in the left arm, shoulder or hand.
Phantom limb pain
This is the strange phenomenon of feeling pain in a limb that has been
amputated. Most people who have lost a limb say they continue to feel
sensations and pain in the lost limb.
Neuropathic pain
This relates to pain in the nerves themselves, and is more commonly
known as neuralgia. It is commonly caused by injury or disease to the
nerve tissue. This pain can be the hardest to treat because the brain
is, in fact, receiving wrong signals.
Back to How You Beat Pain