Table of Contents

๐Ÿ”ฅ Pain Classification

๐Ÿ“Œ Definition

Pain is classified by intensity to guide assessment and treatment decisions. The classification into mild, moderate, and severe pain is commonly based on patient-reported scores using scales such as:

๐Ÿ”ข Numeric Scale Cutoffs

Category NRS/VAS Score Description
Mild pain 1โ€“3 Noticeable, but does not interfere with daily activities or concentration
Moderate pain 4โ€“6 Interferes with some activities, may require analgesia, affects mood or function
Severe pain 7โ€“10 Disabling, constant, interferes with sleep, mobility, and vital signs; requires strong analgesia

๐Ÿง  Clinical Examples

Pain Intensity Neurosurgical Context
Mild pain Discomfort at surgical site, tension headache, early postop day 2โ€“3
Moderate pain Typical post-craniotomy headache, lumbar drain discomfort, wound stretching
Severe pain Intracranial pressure headache, post-DREZotomy pain, hemorrhage or infection

๐Ÿ’Š Analgesia Guidelines by Pain Severity

Pain Level First-Line Treatment Optional Add-ons
Mild Paracetamol (acetaminophen), NSAID Local measures, positioning
Moderate Paracetamol + NSAID Weak opioids (e.g., tramadol), gabapentinoids
Severe Strong opioids (morphine, oxycodone) IV rescue, sedation, PCA pump

โš ๏ธ Notes

๐Ÿ“Œ Summary

Understanding pain intensity helps tailor analgesic strategies. - Mild pain: tolerable, non-limiting - Moderate pain: interferes with activity - Severe pain: disabling, urgent treatment required


Major types of pain:

Nociceptive pain

a) somatic: well localized. Described as sharp, stabbing, aching or cramping. Results from tissue injury or inflammation, or from nerve or plexus compression. Responds to treating the underlying pathology or by interrupting the nociceptive pathway.

b) visceral: poorly localized. Poor response to primary pain medications.

Deafferentation

Poorly localized. Described as crushing, tearing, tingling or numbness. Also causes burning dysesthesia numbness often with lancinating pain, and hyperpathia. Unaffected by ablative procedures.

โ€œSympathetically maintainedโ€ pain and the likes, e.g. causalgia


Often classified as acute or chronic.

Acute pain is frequently associated with anxiety and hyperactivity of the sympathetic nervous system (eg, tachycardia, increased respiratory rate and BP, diaphoresis, dilated pupils).

Chronic pain

Musculoskeletal pain

see Neuropathic pain

see Back pain

see Leg pain

Abdominal pain

Lancinating pain

Intractable pain