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Advil, Medipren (Ibuprofen)

Advil, Medipren (Ibuprofen)


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PAIN AND ITS TREATMENT
Aristotle called pain the passion of the soul, and those of you who have suffered from intense and recurring pain know very well how deeply it erodes the framework of your existence, touching every part of your life. Headache, unlike most other afflictions, has the devilish capacity to begin in childhood and become a lifelong companion. Having headaches can become part of your personality, a characteristic of your very being and identity. Because of this and because the pain and its causes remain a mystery, it is understandable that treating long-standing and recurring pain is neither simple nor straightforward. Chronic headaches are often difficult to treat.
Before entering into a discussion of the various types of headaches and the many important issues concerning headache pain and its treatment, it is appropriate to introduce you to the complex subject of pain itself, along with the many ways that it can be treated.
Psychological elements contribute significantly to pain and its treatment. Although it is not clearly understood just how, the mind exerts an extraordinary influence on the recognition and meaning attached to painful sensations. For example, it may not be until the end of the day that an injury you incurred during an earlier enjoyable activity is felt as pain. But the pain caused by banging a shin on a coffee table while racing to answer a relentlessly ringing telephone hurts immediately and exquisitely.
Other features related to pain also remain obscure. How much do social, emotional, and cultural influences affect your ability to cope with and display your painful experiences? Some families, and even entire cultures, place a very high premium on a stoic toleration of pain and seek to minimize the expression of discomfort. Other cultures encourage the demonstration of suffering, and patterns for the display of pain become part of that culture’s personality.
These psychological and cultural factors, together with important biological considerations, ultimately affect how you feel pain by influencing your pain threshold. The pain threshold can be described in simple terms as a biological thermostat. When the thermostat is set high, a strong, unpleasant stimulus is required for you to feel pain. When the thermostat is lowered, a mildly unpleasant sensation will be experienced as pain.
The pain threshold varies from person to person and can even change within the same person, depending upon emotional and biological factors. Depression, anxiety, and frustration seem to lower the pain threshold, while happiness, contentment, and enjoyable moments raise it.
Before going further, consider the following questions, which are designed to prime your awareness of a few features of your own personality. Keep the responses to these questions in mind as you read through the book. Understanding yourself is very important when attempting to come to grips with the problem of pain.
Are you a happy person?
Are you irritable without reasonable cause?
Do you like yourself?
Is your life reasonably settled and organized?
Does your life have a goal?
Do you have a bad temper?
Are you an angry person or do you carry a “chip on your shoulder”?
Are you kind and forgiving?
Do you carry grudges?
Are you bored and restless?
Would you like yourself if you saw yourself as others do?
Are you depressed or blue much of the time?
Must you prove your virility or femininity?
Are you dependable?
Do you abuse yourself?
Are you selfish to others?
Do you know how to relax and enjoy life?
Do you try to see the best in every circumstance or prefer to pick out the worst?
Do you tend to blame others for your plight? Do you feel victimized by life?
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