[Pain reduction through physical medicine : Update on the evidence].
Uwe LangeGabriel DischereitPhilipp Moritz KlemmPublished in: Zeitschrift fur Rheumatologie (2022)
Epidemiological data from the core documentation of the regional cooperative rheumatism centers in Germany confirm that the symptom of pain is an immense problem in both active inflammatory rheumatic diseases and when in remission. By definition pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience. In the context of inflammatory rheumatic diseases, nociceptive pain is triggered by inflammatory mediators or structurally mechanical distress via activation of the nociceptors. In addition, inflammation is also locally enhanced by the release of proinflammatory substances, such as substance P or calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) from activated nociceptors. The phenomena of inflammation and pain are linked in a self-reinforcing mechanism, which explains why pain can be effectively controlled by inhibiting inflammation and, conversely, why inhibiting pain also has positive effects on the inflammatory response. This review focuses on publications on multimodal rheumatological complex treatment and thermotherapy, which, under evidence-based study criteria, showed a reduction in pain and a partial influencing of molecular markers with a subsequent influence on the development of pain and the inflammatory process. The results are presented in the context of current physiological knowledge on the development of pain.