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Innovations in pediatric chronic pain management


 

Virtual reality distraction instead of sedation

Henry Huang, MD, anesthesiologist and pain physician at Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, said a special team there collaborates with the Chariot Program at Stanford (Calif.) University and incorporates virtual reality to distract children from pain and anxiety and harness their imaginations during induction for anesthesia, intravenous placement, and vaccinations.

“At our institution we’ve been recruiting patients to do a proof of concept to do virtual reality distraction for pain procedures, such as nerve blocks or steroid injections,” Dr. Huang said.

Traditionally, kids would have received oral or intravenous sedation to help them cope with the fear and pain.

“We’ve been successful in several cases without relying on any sedation,” he said. “The next target is to expand that to the chronic pain population.”

The distraction techniques are promising for a wide range of ages, he said, and the programming is tailored to the child’s ability to interact with the technology.

He said he is also part of a group promoting use of ultrasound instead of x-rays to guide injections to the spine and chest to reduce children’s exposure to radiation. His group is helping teach these methods to other clinicians nationally.

Dr. Huang said the most important development in chronic pediatric pain has been the growth of rehab centers that include the medical team, and practitioners from psychology as well as occupational and physical therapy.

“More and more hospitals are recognizing the importance of these pain rehab centers,” he said.

The problem, Dr. Huang said, is that these programs have always been resource intensive and involve highly specialized clinicians. The cost and the limited number of specialists make it difficult for widespread rollout.

“That’s always been the challenge from the pediatric pain world,” he said.

Recognizing the complexity of kids’ chronic pain

Angela Garcia, MD, a consulting physician for pediatric rehabilitation medicine at UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh said recognizing the validity and complexity of pediatric pain has led to multidisciplinary approaches and specialty clinics for chronic pain instead of primarily pharmaceutical solutions.

Techniques such as biofeedback and acupuncture are becoming more mainstream in pediatric chronic care, she said.

At the UPMC clinic, children and their families talk with a care team about their values and what they want to accomplish in managing the child’s pain. They ask what the pain is preventing the child from doing.

“Their goals really are our goals,” she said.

She said she also refers almost all patients to one of the center’s pain psychologists.

“Pain is biopsychosocial,” she said. “We want to make sure we’re addressing how to cope with pain.”

Dr. Garcia said she hopes nutritional therapy is one of the next approaches the clinic will incorporate, particularly surrounding how dietary changes can reduce inflammation “and heal the body from the inside out.”

She said the hospital is also looking at developing an inpatient pain program for kids whose functioning has changed so drastically that they need more intensive therapies.

Whatever the treatment approach, she said, addressing the pain early is critical.

“There is an increased risk of a child with chronic pain becoming an adult with chronic pain,” Dr. Garcia pointed out, “and that can lead to a decrease in the ability to participate in society.”

Ms. Weatherred, Ms. Duggan, Dr. Huang, and Dr. Garcia reported no relevant financial relationships.

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