What evaluating pain and disability can be used for
To help your doctor determine the most appropriate treatment for
your particular case at any given moment, since:
Some treatments are relatively aggressive, and their use is only
justified when the intensity of pain or the degree of disability
require it.
Some treatments are move effective in improving pain and others
in restoring daily activity, so determining both of these parameters
reliably helps your doctor to choose the best combination of treatments
that you may need at any given moment.
Determining the course of your pain and disability helps your doctor
to objectively assess the effectiveness of previously prescribed
treatments, which allows him to adapt them accordingly.
How to evaluate pain and disability
There are some scales developed to evaluate them.
Scientific studies have demonstrated that they are reliable and
their results show the correlation with intensity of pain and degree
of disability due to back pain better than other tests, such as
X-rays,
Magnetic
Resonance Imaging (MRI) or electromyography.
The results of these scales are used to determine the degree of
pain or disability in a particular person at a given moment. Therefore,
they are useful in evaluating the particular situation and
course of a specific patient, but are not necessarily useful
in comparing the seriousness of a disease in different people.
Pain and disability must be measured separately.
Both aspects are different and they do not correlate with one another
well: there are patients in great pain with few restrictions on
their daily life and vice-versa. That is why it is a mistake to
use pain intensity as an indicator of the degree of disability or
vice-versa. Both of these aspects must be measured by different
specific scales.
There are many scales for measuring pain and disability
due to back pain, but not all of them are reliable. There
are two scales used in this section: the "visual analogical
scales" for measuring pain, and the "Roland-Morris scale"
for assessing disability.
The Editorial Committee of this Web site has chosen these scales
because they are simple, they are used all over the world, they
can (and must) be filled out directly by the patient without any
outside help, and they have proven to be valid and reliable. But
there are more scales. All of the scales available for back ailments
are listed in a section of the scientific area of this Web site,
indicating their characteristics and specifying whether they have
been "validated" (that is to say, whether or not there
is any data that demonstrates their reliability).
What to do with scale results
Inform your doctor of the results of both scales.
That can help him to recommend the most suitable treatment for your
case and particular situation.
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