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What is Pain?

By Carol & Richard Eustice, About.com

Updated: February 26, 2007

About.com Health's Disease and Condition content is reviewed by Kate Grossman, MD

Definition: Pain is defined pain as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage, according to The International Association for the Study of Pain. It is useful to distinguish between two basic types of pain, acute and chronic, and they differ greatly.

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  • Acute Pain

    Acute pain, for the most part, results from:

    • disease
    • injury to tissues
    • inflammation

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  • Acute pain generally comes on suddenly, for example, after trauma or surgery, and may be accompanied by anxiety or emotional distress. The cause of acute pain can usually be diagnosed and treated, and the pain is self-limiting, that is, it is confined to a given period of time and severity. In some rare instances, it can become chronic.

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  • Chronic Pain

    Chronic pain is widely believed to represent disease itself. It can be made much worse by environmental and psychological factors. Chronic pain persists over a longer period of time than acute pain and is resistant to most medical treatments. It can, and often does, cause severe problems for patients.

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  • Source: NIH Publication No. 01-2406, Pain: Hope Through Research, NINDS, December 2001

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