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by nonameiguess
760 days ago
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This is interesting to me. I had severe spinal degeneration in my late 30s, to the extent that I had an incident wherein trying to put underwear on while standing led to a series of spasms that totally immobilized me for three days, to the point I couldn't even go to the hospital because I couldn't move, and the feeling was roughly analagous to having some kind of electrode in my spinal cord that shocked and paralyzed every 30 seconds, and would also do the same if I moved. The level of pain was so beyond anything else I've ever experienced that it totally redefined the shifted the entire scale. But even that was not a 10! When I was taken off of anesthesia before painkillers were adminstered, following a multilevel lumbar interbody fusion that lasted 7 hours, I achieved an entirely new level yet again that I thankfully only vaguely rememeber because of the general haziness of memory formation post-surgery. I know I screamed at the top of my lungs begging a nurse to kill me, and I had no other working senses except pain, but I don't really remember what it was like qualitatively. Conversely, I broke my hand about a month ago, fourth metacarpal into four pieces with a 7mm displacement, and I didn't even seek treatment for a week and a half because I thought it couldn't be broken because I had never before broken a bone and expected it to be obvious from pain, but the sensation didn't even register to me as pain. All of which is a long-winded way of saying yes, there are levels of pain you cannot even conceive of if you never experience it and it does make me question the usefulness of the scales, in that when I first enrolled in pain management before things got truly bad, I was typically rating a 6 what today I'm not sure I would even rate a 1, but as far as I know, providers are aware of this and only use your numerical rating to assess how much your level of pain changes over short enough spans of time that your Pain Overton Window hasn't totally shifted in the meantime. |
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