Hypnosis for Pain Management By Sandy Victor Sandy Victor is a Certified Hypnotist/Hypnotherapist by the National Guild of Hypnotists in a private practice. I am located in Buffalo Grove, IL, and have been doing hypnosis for over 40 years mainly for personal improvement matters. For more information, contact me at - sandy_victor@hotmail.com, www.SandyVictorHypnosis.com and (847) 634-1376.
This is the third in a series of articles on the use of hypnosis to improve the life of individuals with commonly presented issues:
Pain Management
The use of hypnosis to reduce or eliminate pain is one of the most scientifically studied topics by many researchers. Many different
kinds of pains have been studied. This article addresses many of the studies that have been made for specific types of pain management. Pain takes many forms and impacts many parts of the body. It can be defined as a localized or generalized unpleasant bodily sensation or complex of sensations that causes mild to severe physical discomfort and emotional distress and typically results from bodily disorder (such as injury or disease). Pain that persists for longer than 6 months is referred to as chronic pain. Unrelieved chronic pain can cause considerable suffering, physical limitations, and emotional distress. Further, chronic pain is one of the most common reasons for seeking medical care but often persists despite
treatment with analgesics and physical modalities. Hypnosis has been shown to offer help for all these types of pain management.
There is a wonderful article on International Journal Clinical Experimental Hypnosis. 2007 Jul; 55(3): 275–287, Hypnotherapy for the Management of Chronic Pain by Gary Elkins, Mark P. Jensen, and David R. Patterson. This article reviews thirteen controlled trials of hypnosis for the treatment of chronic pain. The findings indicate that hypnosis interventions consistently produce significant decreases in pain associated with a variety of chronic-pain problems. Also, hypnosis was generally found to be more effective than nonhypnotic interventions such as attention, physical therapy, and
education. The following is a summary of the use of hypnosis in the treatment of several chronic pain problems.
Cancer Pain
Spiegel and Bloom (1983) assigned women with chronic cancer pain from breast carcinoma to either standard care or weekly expressive-supportive group therapy for up to 12 months. The women randomized to the group therapy condition were assigned to groups that either did or did not have self-hypnosis training as a part of their treatment. The hypnosis intervention was directed toward enhancing patient competence and mastery in managing pain and stress related to cancer. Hypnotic training included suggestions to “filter out the hurt” of any sensations by imagining competing
sensations in affected areas. Patients were also given instructions for using self-hypnosis outside of the group-therapy sessions. Both treatment groups demonstrated significantly less pain and suffering than the control sample.
Low-Back Pain
McCauley et al. (1983) conducted a prospective trial comparing hypnosis and relaxation training for chronic low-back pain. Seventeen outpatients were assigned to either self-hypnosis or relaxation. The baseline was an EMG-assessment session and 1 week later the patients began eight individual weekly sessions. Patients were assessed 1 week after the completion of treatment and then again 3 months after the treatment ended. Patients in both groups were found to have
significant reductions in pain as measured by the McGill Pain Questionnaire and visual analog ratings of pain. Patients given the hypnosis intervention reported significant pre- to posttreatment. However, both the hypnosis intervention and relaxation were effective; neither proved to be superior to the other.
Arthritis Pain
Gay et al. (2002) compared the effectiveness of hypnosis and Jacobson relaxation for the reduction of osteoarthritis pain. Thirty-six patients with osteoarthritis pain were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: hypnosis, relaxation training, and a no-treatment/standard-care control condition. The hypnosis intervention consisted of eight weekly sessions that began with a standard
relaxation induction followed by suggestions for positive imagery, as well as a memory from childhood that involved joint mobility. The subjects in the standard-care control condition were administered the outcome measures and were offered treatment after their last follow-up assessment. Patients in the hypnosis treatment showed a substantial and significant decrease in pain intensity. However, although significant differences between the hypnosis and the standard-care control condition were found mid-treatment, posttreatment, and at follow-up, the differences between the effects of the hypnosis intervention and the relaxation control on pain reduction were not statistically different.
Sickle Cell
Disease
Dinges et al. (1997) enrolled children and adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) who reported experiencing episodes of vaso-occlusive pain into a prospective 2-year treatment protocol. A pre- and post-experimental design was used and participants were asked to complete daily diaries. Results indicated the self-hypnosis intervention was associated with a significant reduction in the number of pain days.
Temporomandibular (TMJ) Pain
Temporomandibular disorder can be associated with chronic pain related to dysfunction of the masticatory musculature, the temporomandibular joint, or both. Simon and Lewis (2000) examined the effectiveness of hypnosis on temporomandibular pain disorder.
Measures of pain symptoms (pain intensity, duration, and frequency) were assessed on four separate occasions: during wait list, before treatment, after treatment, and at 6-month follow-up. The hypnosis intervention consisted of education about hypnosis and five sessions that involved an eye-closure induction, relaxation imagery, suggestions for limb catalepsy, metaphors, suggestions for hypnotic analgesia and anesthesia suggestions, and suggestions that muscle tension would serve as a cue for relaxation. Patients were also instructed to practice self-hypnosis daily with audiotaped recordings of the hypnotic treatment. The results indicated a significant decrease in pain frequency, pain duration, and an increase in daily functioning.
Analyses also suggested that the treatment gains were maintained for 6 months after treatment with reduced pain and improved daily functioning.
Fibromyalgia
In a controlled study, Haanen et al. (1991) randomly assigned patients with fibromyalgia to groups that received either eight 1-hour sessions of hypnotherapy with a self-hypnosis home-practice tape over a 3-month period, or physical therapy (that included massage) and muscle relaxation training) for 3 months. Outcome was assessed pre- and posttreatment and at 3-month follow-up. Compared with patients in the physical therapy group, the patients who received hypnosis showed significantly better outcomes on measures of muscle pain, fatigue, sleep disturbance,
distress, and patient overall assessment of outcome. These differences were maintained at the 3-month follow-up assessment and the average percent decrease in pain among patients who received hypnosis was clinically significant, whereas the percent decrease in the patients who received physical therapy was marginal.
Disability-Related Pain
Jensen et al. (2005) examined the effects of 10 sessions of standardized (script-driven) hypnotic analgesia treatment on pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, depression, and perceived control over pain in patients with chronic pain secondary to a disability. Analyses indicated significant pre- to posttreatment improvement in pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, and perceived
control over pain (but not depressive symptoms) over and above change that occurred during the baseline period. Improvement was also maintained at the 3-month follow-up.
Mixed Chronic-Pain Problems
Melzack and Perry (1975) examined the effects of hypnosis and neurofeedback in patients who had a variety of chronic-pain problems. Baseline data was collected during two no-treatment (baseline) sessions, and patients were then randomly assigned to one of three treatment conditions: four sessions of hypnosis alone, eight sessions of neurofeedback training alone, or both hypnosis and neurofeedback training. There was a reduction in pain observed during the hypnosis training, however, none of the observed changes in
either the neurofeedback or hypnosis conditions were statistically significant in comparison to the baseline phase.
Edelson and Fitzpatrick (1989) evaluated hypnosis and cognitive-behavior therapy for treatment of chronic pain. Patients with various chronic-pain problems (back pain being the most frequent) were randomly assigned to: cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) alone, CBT plus hypnosis treatment, or an attention control (supportive, nondirective discussions). The hypnosis and CBT treatments were identical with the exception of a hypnotic induction. It is noteworthy, however, that the CBT intervention used in this study included some what might be considered “hypnotic components.” The results indicated decreases in pain
intensity for both the hypnosis intervention and the CBT treatment that were sustained at 1-month follow-up.
Appel and Bleiberg (2005–2006) investigated the association between hypnotizability and hypnosis for treatment of chronic pain. Twenty-seven patients with a variety of chronic-pain problems received hypnosis treatment sessions directed at “teaching self-regulation of the affective and sensory components of pain.” The word hypnosis was not mentioned during the intervention, which included relaxation training, autogenic statements, guided imagery for pain alteration and health and healing, and individualization to use images “in a way that is best for him or her.” The results indicated a significant reduction in pain
ratings pre- and posttreatment. Changes in pain ratings were significantly correlated with hypnotizability as measured by the Stanford Clinical Hypnotic Scale.
Headaches & Migraines
A total of 8 additional studies were identified that examined hypnotic techniques either alone or in combination with other nonpharmaceutical techniques, such as visual imagery, relaxation, and pain-displacement techniques. These studies demonstrate that hypnosis and relaxation techniques are effective in reducing short-term and long-term headache activity in migraine sufferers.
Child Birth
Researchers have long examined the medical benefits of hypnosis. And there’s a significant amount of
evidence that shows a range of benefits, including: less reliance on pain medication (fewer epidurals), shorter hospital stays, improved pain tolerance, more positive experiences, shorter labors, fewer surgical interventions.
Summary
A review of published articles on studies that evaluated the efficacy of hypnosis for chronic pain. The studies show that hypnosis intervention was significantly more effective than a no-treatment condition in reducing chronic-pain. Moreover, the efficacy of hypnosis in reducing pain was consistently confirmed for a wide variety of different chronic-pain conditions (e.g., cancer, low-back pain, arthritis pain, sickle cell disease, temporomandibular pain, disability-related pain,
and headaches including migraines). Child birth experiencing less pain and fewer drugs is also documented.
References
Appel PR, Bleiberg J. Pain reduction is related to hypnotizability but not to relaxation or to reduction of suffering: A preliminary investigation. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis. 2005–2006;48:153–161.
Dinges DF, Whitehouse WG, Orne EC, Bloom PB, Carlin MM, Bauer NK, et al. Self-hypnosis training as an adjunctive treatment in the management of pain associated with sickle cell disease. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. 1997;45:417–432.
Edelson J, Fitzpatrick JL. A comparison of cognitive-behavioral and hypnotic treatments of chronic
pain. Journal of Clinical Psychology. 1989;45:316–323.
Gay M, Philippot P, Luminet O. Differential effectiveness of psychological interventions for reducing osteoarthritis pain: A comparison of Erikson hypnosis and Jacobson relaxation. European Journal of Pain. 2002;6:1–16.
Haanen HC, Hoenderdos HT, van Romunde LK, Hop WC, Mallee C, Terwiel JP, et al. Controlled trial of hypnotherapy in the treatment of refractory fibromyalgia. Journal of Rheumatology. 1991;18:72–75.
Jensen MP, Hanley MA, Engel JM, Romano JM, Barber JB, Cardenas DD, et al. Hypnotic analgesia for chronic pain in persons with disabilities: A case series. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis. 2005;53:198–228.
McCauley
JD, Thelen MH, Frank RG, Willard RR, Callen KE. Hypnosis compared to relaxation in the outpatient management of chronic low back pain. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1983;64:548–552.
Melzack R, Perry C. Self-regulation of pain: The use of alpha-feedback and hypnotic training for the control of chronic pain. Experimental Neurology. 1975;46:452–469.
Simon EP, Lewis DM. Medical hypnosis for temporomandibular disorders: Treatment efficacy and medical utilization outcome. Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, and Endodontics. 2000;90:54–63.
Spiegel D, Bloom JR. Group therapy and hypnosis reduce metastatic breast carcinoma pain. Psychosomatic Medicine.
1983;45:333–339.
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