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Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October 2011
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Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Developments in EMDR practiceMarbles in the elbow and other stories:

Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain

Helen MacdonaldDurham

7th October 2011

Page 2: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Developments in EMDR practice:Treatment of persistent pain

• Background and context– Impact of persistent pain– Why using EMDR can help

• Putting it into practice– Choosing targets for change– Using imagery

• Case exampleWhere losing your marbles can help

Page 3: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Background and context

• Why do EMDR clinicians and researchers take an interest in persistent pain– Impact of treating trauma on pain experience

• How many people we see who have persistent pain

• Impact of persistent pain on quality of life• Effectiveness of current treatments

Page 4: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

The impact of pain: statistics• Between 10-50% of chronic pain patients

meet criteria for PTSD (Sharp 2004)

7.8 million people in the UK have a chronic pain problem - all ages

70% of sufferers are <60. 25% lose their jobs 22% develop depression

(Chronic Pain Coalition 2007)

4

Page 5: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

The personal experience of pain

Page 6: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

What do we know about persistent pain?

• Pain: “An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience which is due to actual or potential tissue damage, or which is described in terms of such damage” Mersky and Bogduk (1994)

• Chronic pain ….duration longer than six months (DSM (iv), 1994)

• Usually refers to non-life-threatening conditions

(Cole, Macdonald & Carus 2005)

Page 7: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Acute pain: ‘Good’ pain

• Designed to protect the body from harm or minimise damage• Survival• It hurts.....–You stop doing it–It stops hurting–You don’t do it again

Page 8: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

‘Bad’ Pain

• It hurts – You stop doing it– It doesn’t stop hurting– It doesn’t get better

• ?Not helping survival• E.g. The story ofPhantom Limb pain

Page 9: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Proposed Role of Memory in persistent pain

• Pain encoded as traumatic experience

• Pre-morbid traumas may be memory-linked to the pain (Grant, 2002)

• ‘Cognitive map’-body image and somatic experience (Lister, 2003 )

Page 10: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Information processing

• somatic memory of traumatic experience (pain)

chronic pain(Wilensky, 2006)

• Reprocessing the sensory experiences/ traumatic events facilitate resolution

• i.e. Re-consolidate memory as less distressing

Page 11: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Pain and memory

–Pain memory isolated from any potential adaptive information–Unresolved material easily triggered during

similar experiences• Intrusive thoughts • Emotions• Somatic response

Page 12: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Effective intervention:

•Decreased affect•Reducing image vividness

Page 13: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Evidence

• Best evidence: Phantom Limb pain– Also:

• Aborting Migraine attacks• Headache• Medically Unexplained Symptoms (subjective

health complaints)• Fibromyalgia

Page 14: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Putting it into practice

• Own experience:• Current or past referral with persistent pain as

an issue• Impact on functioning• Potential targets- past, present, future?• What imagery?

Page 15: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Putting it into practice

• Usual assessment• Medication• Belief in person’s experience of pain• Education on the role of stress in experience

of physical symptoms• Appropriate management of other issues:– Substance misuse– Depression– Risk

Page 16: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Factors to consider• Investigations ( and what they mean)• Optimum management of the condition ?– E.g. Pain relief medication– Exercise/physiotherapy

• ‘Compliance’ with recommendations?• Is the person waiting for more medical input?• What does the person believe is happening?

The digestive biscuit story

Page 17: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Giving rationale for EMDR

• Increased coping• Changed attitude to

the pain• Reducing stress/

Relaxation• Decreased intensity• caution about

offering pain reduction as goal

Page 18: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Choosing a Target for EMDR: Past situations

• ‘What best represents this for you?’ • Specific image or memory– Trauma

• Pain related targets– Personal and physical constraints– Impact on life– Medical interventions

• Pain memories– Location of sensation(s)

• Responses of others

Page 19: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Choosing a Target for EMDR: Present situations

• Personal circumstances• Having needs met• Impact on daily life

Page 20: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Choosing a Target for EMDR: Future situations

• Thoughts and feelings about pain and future• Impact of pain on:– Family– Social life– Occupation– Economic circumstances

• Medical

Page 21: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Specific Antidote imagery: targeting the pain itself

• deRoos and Veenstra (2009)• Image of current pain sensation• Think of something that could take the pain away

or make it better – ‘antidote fantasy’• Imagery of healing• Using ‘antidote imagery’– Hoping for change in sensation

• Evidence that there are changes in image and sensation

Page 22: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Case example

• 47-year old man, involved in an RTA near to his workplace

• Severe damage to his arm, resulting in:– scarring– reduced function–persistent pain–Occupational and relationship changes

Page 23: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Case example: Marbles in the elbow

‘Bag of marbles’

Image of current pain sensation

Page 24: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

What could take the pain away?

• Medical treatment to make the elbow as it was before

• Antidote ‘fantasy’• Image: X-ray

Page 25: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Case example continued

• EMDR using the antidote image• Resources• Reduction in pain• Acceptance• Increased functioning

Page 26: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Developments in EMDR practice for Pain

• High level of unmet need: people in pain

• EMDR can facilitate changes in how pain is experienced somatically and emotionally.

• Specifically working with imagery and developing an ‘antidote’ can add to EMDR interventions with pain targets

Page 27: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Developments in EMDR practice:

• Limitations:

• Need for greater sample sizes in research• More consistent rigour in research• Need for better explanations of mechanism• Pain can get worse, particularly at first

Page 28: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

Developments in EMDR practice

Thank youAny Questions?

Helen Macdonald 2011 [email protected]

Page 29: Developments in EMDR practice Marbles in the elbow and other stories: Using EMDR in the treatment of persistent pain Helen Macdonald Durham 7 th October.

References• Grant, M and Thelfro, C., (2002) EMDR in the treatment of chronic pain, in J. Clin. Psychol,

Dec;58(12):1505-20 • Grant, M ( 2001) Pain control with EMDR; a practitioner’s manual, New Hope• Hassard, A. (1995). Investigation of eye movement desensitization in pain clinic clients.

Behavioral & Cognitive Psychotherapy, 23 (2), 177-185.• Hekmat, H., Groth, S. & Rogers, D. (1994) Pain ameliorating effect of eye movement

desensitization. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry, 25, 121-130• Lister, D (2003) Correcting the Cognitive Map with EMDR: A Possible Neurobiological

Mechanism, www.EMDR-practitioner.net• O’Keefe, J and Nadel L. (1978). The Hippocampus as a Cognitive Map. Oxford University Press • Rothschild, B ( 2000) The Body Remembers• Van den Hout et al (2010) Counting during recall: Taxing of working memory and reduced

vividness and emotionality of negative memories in: Applied Cognitive Psychology 24 no 3 303-311

• Van der Kolk, B, (1994) The body keeps the score. http://www.trauma-pages.com/vanderk4.htm

• Vanderlaan, L. (2000). The resolution of phantom limb pain in a 15-year old girl using eye movement desensitization and reprocessing. EMDR Clinician