Nonopioid Alternatives
Prescription
opioids are sometimes used to treat
moderate-to-severe pain. Because prescription
opioids have a number of serious side effects,
it is important for you to ask questions and
learn more about the benefits and risks of
opioids. Make sure you’re getting care that is
safe, effective, and right for you.
This
page provides information about nonopioid
alternative treatments to manage pain. You and your
healthcare practitioner can develop a course of
treatment that uses multiple methods and modalities,
including prescription medications such as opioids,
and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each
approach.
Pain management requires
attention to biological, psychological, and
environmental factors. Before deciding with your
healthcare practitioner about how to treat your
pain, you should consider options so that your
treatment provides the greatest benefit with the
lowest risk.
Treatments Provided by Licensed Healthcare Providers:
·
Physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy
(OT). PT helps to increase
flexibility and range of motion which can
provide pain relief. PT can also restore or
maintain your ability to move and walk. OT helps
improve your ability to perform activities of
daily living, such as dressing, bathing, and
eating.
· Massage
therapy. Therapeutic massage
may relieve pain by relaxing painful muscles,
tendons, and joints; relieving stress and
anxiety; and possibly impeding pain messages to
and from the brain.
· Acupuncture. Acupuncture
is based on traditional Chinese medical concepts
and modern medical techniques and provides pain
relief with no side-effects by stimulating the
body’s pain-relieving endorphins. Techniques may
include inserting extremely fine needles into
the skin at specific points on the body.
· Osteopathic
Manipulative Treatment (OMT). Osteopathic
physicians (DO) are educated, trained, and
licensed physicians, but also receive additional
training in OMT. OMT is a set of hands-on
techniques used by osteopathic physicians to
diagnose, treat, and prevent illness or injury.
OMT is often used to treat pain but can also be
used to promote healing, increase overall
mobility, and treat other health problems.
· Behavioral
interventions. Mental health
professionals can offer many avenues for pain
relief and management. For example, they can
help you reframe negative thinking patterns
about your pain that may be interfering with
your ability to function well in life, work, and
relationships. Behavioral interventions can
allow you to better manage your pain by changing
behavior patterns.
· Topical
treatments and medications. Topical
Agents, including Anesthetics, NSAIDs, Muscle
Relaxers, and Neuropathic Agents, can be applied
directly to the affected areas to provide needed
pain relief and typically have a minimal risk of
side-effects due to low absorption of the
medication into the blood stream. Compounded
topicals prepared by a pharmacist can be
customized to the patient’s specific needs.
· Cold
and heat. Cold can be useful
soon after an injury to relieve pain, decrease
inflammation and muscle spasms, and help speed
recovery. Heat raises your pain threshold and
relaxes muscles.
· Exercise. Staying
physically active, despite some pain, can play a
helpful role for people with some of the more
common pain conditions, including low back pain,
arthritis, and fibromyalgia.
· Weight
loss. Many painful health
conditions are worsened by excess weight. It
makes sense, then, that losing weight can help
to relieve some kinds of pain.
· Diet
and nutrition. Chronic pain
may be the result of chronic inflammation. Some
foods can increase inflammation and contribute
to pain levels. Reducing or eliminating foods
that increase inflammation may provide pain
relief.
· Yoga and tai
chi. These mind-body and
exercise practices incorporate breath control,
meditation, and movements to stretch and
strengthen muscles. They may help with chronic
pain conditions such as fibromyalgia, low back
pain, arthritis, or headaches.
· Transcutaneous
electrical nerve stimulation (TENS). This
technique employs a very mild electrical current
to block pain signals going from the body to the
brain.
· Over-the-counter
medications. Pain relievers
that you can buy without a prescription, such as
acetaminophen (Tylenol) or nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) like aspirin,
ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), and naproxen (Aleve,
Naprosyn) can help to relieve mild to moderate
pain.
·Interventional pain
management. “Interventional”
procedures might include an injection of an
anesthetic medicine or steroid around nerves,
tendons, joints or muscles; spinal cord
stimulation; insertion of a drug delivery
system; or a procedure to stop a nerve from
working for a long period of time.
· Non-opioid
anesthesia. Non-opioid
anesthesia. Non-opioid anesthesia refers to the
anesthetic technique of using medications to
provide anesthesia and post-operative pain
relief in a way that does not require opioids.
Anesthesiologists can replace opioids with other
medications selected for their ability to block
surgical and post-surgical pain. By replacing
opioids and incorporating the variety of
anesthetic and analgesic medications that block
the process of pain, anesthesia providers can
provide a safer anesthetic that avoids the
adverse effects of opioids.
Discuss
these alternatives with your healthcare practitioner
and talk about the advantages and disadvantages of
the specific options being considered. Different
approaches work better on different types of pain.
Some treatments for pain can have undesirable side
effects while others may provide benefits beyond
pain relief. Depending on your insurance coverage,
some options may not be covered, resulting in
substantial out-of-pocket costs. Other options may
require a significant time commitment due to the
number of treatments or the time required for the
treatment. Good communication between you and your
healthcare practitioner is essential in building the
best pain management plan for you.