The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model
The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model
Manual Therapy
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/math
Professional issue
a r t i c l e i n f o
a b s t r a c t
Article history:
Received 18 September 2013
Received in revised form
20 January 2014
Accepted 29 January 2014
Pain is no longer considered to be simply the transmission of nociception, but rather an output subsequent to the complex interactions of homeostatic systems. Manual therapists clinical reasoning needs to
incorporate this complexity in order to develop individualised effective treatment plans.
Pain classication strategies attempting to assist clinical reasoning traditionally dene multiple types
of pain e nociceptive, neuropathic, centrally sensitised e potentially tting elements of the pain experience to linear independent systems, rather than embracing the multiple dimensions. It is our
contention that pain should not be classied unidimensionally. In all pain states consideration should be
given to the combined inuence of physiological, cognitive, emotional and social inputs, all of which have
the potential to inuence nociception.
The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model presented in this paper attempts to capture the complexity
of the human pain experience by integrating these multiple dimensions into a decision making process.
Three categories have been created to facilitate this e central modulation, regional inuences, and local
stimulation. The Model allows for the identication of a predominant element to become the focus of
treatment but also for the identication of changes to clinical presentation, where new treatment targets
can emerge.
2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:
Physiotherapy
Clinical reasoning
Pain
Movement
Background
Pain is no longer considered to be simply the transmission of
nociception. Current conceptions suggest pain is the most salient
part of an activated body protection system; an output subsequent
to the complex interaction of homeostatic systems in response to
an identied threat (Fig. 1) (Jnig et al., 2006). The body protection
system involves motor, autonomic, psychological, endocrine and
immune systems, and pain emerges from the activation of a specic
neurological network, matrix or signature (Gifford, 1998; Melzack,
2005; Moseley et al., 2012; Melzack and Katz, 2013). Pain perception takes place in a context of an individuals environment,
including the physical, social and emotional contexts (Siddall and
Cousins, 2004; Gatchel et al., 2007; Malenbaum et al., 2008), and
then is managed in a clinical context inuenced by the values and
beliefs of the therapist (Foster et al., 2010; Nijs et al., 2012). Clinical
reasoning requires that manual therapists integrate the multiple
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
1356-689X/ 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
Fig. 2. Categories of the Pain and Movement Reasoning Model. (Available under
licence
CC
BY-NC
Aus
3.0
at
http://latrobe.libguides.com/content.php?
pid109542&sid=825367).
Fig. 1. Central nervous system sampling, processing and modifying the psycho-neuroimmunological state in the human pain experience. (Available under licence CC BY-NC
Aus 3.0 at http://latrobe.libguides.com/content.php?pid109542&sid=825367).
Fig. 3. Central Modulation Category. (Available under licence CC BY-NC Aus 3.0 at
http://latrobe.libguides.com/content.php?pid=109542&sid825367).
Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
threat (Linton and Shaw, 2011), but also could be due to enhanced
efcacy of nociceptive transmission (Woolf, 2011).
The genetics of pain also needs to be considered. A person may
be born with a predisposition for pain (Nielsen et al., 2008; Mogil,
2012). More commonly, previous nervous system experiences can
modify phenotypes expression through genetic transcription,
enhancing neural transmission (Woolf, 2011; Hush et al., 2013). As a
result conditions such as persistent neck and back pain, tensiontype headache, orofacial pain, irritable bowel syndrome and bromyalgia frequently coexist (Woolf, 2011). Gene expression also
contributes to the large variation of response to analgesic medications (Diatchenko et al., 2011).
All presentations of pain will have an element of central sensitisation or inhibition that needs to be incorporated into the
reasoning process. While it has been convention to regard acute
and chronic pain as different, this model regards all types of pain
as one, and acknowledges the capacity of the central nervous system for plasticity. The variation in presentation can largely be
explained by the state and structure of the nervous system; that is,
how sensitive it is. Common conceptions of acute pain assume a
naive nervous system or at least an unsensitised one that has no
experience in processing previous pain and threatening situations.
Accordingly, if attributions of central sensitisation are reserved
for chronic presentations, the clinical reasoning of acute presentations becomes simplistic, risking poor decision making with
regard to treatment. For example, a person who is anxious about
the seriousness of their acute injury will likely have reduced central
inhibitory inuences, modulated through attentional and
emotional synaptic networks, leading to a sensitised state of the
nervous system (Villemure and Schweinhardt, 2010). The therapist
needs to incorporate knowledge of this enhanced pain state into
any clinical reasoning process, especially in response to the persons pain report. Failure to address anxiety or distress in acute
presentations risks a poorer outcome for the person (Hill and Fritz,
2011; Nicholas et al., 2011).
Consideration of the Central Modulation Category provides an
understanding of the potential inuences on central processing
including the impact of learning and memory abilities (Flor, 2012;
Zusman, 2012). The estimation of a signicant contribution from
factors known to modulate the sensitivity of the nervous system
may lead the therapist to explore psycho-neuro-immunological
retraining approaches including education, stress management,
cognitive reframing, body awareness, graded motor imagery and
graded exposure (Flor, 2012; Moseley and Flor, 2012).
Regional Inuences category
The Regional Inuences category reects biomechanical principles and neurological inuences on pain that suggest dysfunction
remote to the site of reported pain (Smart et al., 2012b; Schmid
et al., 2013). The sub-categories identied include Kinetic Chain,
Patho-neuro-dynamics and Convergence (Fig. 4).
Kinetic chain
Biomechanically-related issues such as proprioception, hypermobility and hypo-mobility are represented by the Kinetic chain
sub-category. The assumption is that when elements of the chain
are not providing normal support, or alternatively exibility, then
movement along the chain is adversely affected (Slipman et al.,
2000b; Winkelstein, 2004; Eygendaal et al., 2007; Johnston et al.,
Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
Fig. 4. Regional Inuences Category. (Available under licence CC BY-NC Aus 3.0 at
http://latrobe.libguides.com/content.php?pid=109542&sid825367).
2008; Mitchell et al., 2008; Hodges and Tucker, 2011; Cook and
Purdam, 2012; Hodges and Tucker, 2011 and Tobias et al., 2013).
This may mean tissue remote to the biomechanical insufciency is
compressed or distracted or distended, with the result that mechanical nociceptors are triggered. This also takes into consideration that muscles, joints and connective tissues are actually a
continual matrix and their movements are inter-related. Mechanics
of the lumboepelvic complex involves the movement of numerous
joints, muscles and their related fascia, as well as the connective
tissue of adjacent visceral organs (Barker and Briggs, 1999;
Robertson, 2001; Willard et al., 2012).
Recent reviews indicate biomechanical inuences on pain are
not straightforward. Assumptions about the inuences of hyperand hypo-mobility, the role of load in tendinopathy, and biomechanical explanations for neck and back pain have been challenged
(Hetsroni et al., 2006; Cook and Purdam, 2012; McCluskey et al.,
2012; Baster, 2013; Beinert and Taube, 2013; Littlewood et al.,
2013; Mulvey et al., 2013). Therefore any discussion about the kinetic chain should not be independent of neurological inuences,
including cognitive, emotional and social modiers.
Pathoeneuroedynamics (PND)
PND can be dened as when a stimulus of a position or movement exceeds the capability of a compromised nerve bed (Nee and
Butler, 2006). For example if a nerve bed has altered functioning
and accompanying inability to slide in relation to adjacent tissue,
movement that may normally be benign, leads to transmission of
nociceptive information along the nerve bed, and the pain may be
perceived as arising from a different body part. Such compressive or
entrapment neuropathic results in inammatory changes, which
produce altered functioning at the free end of the nociceptor, along
the length of the nerve, at cell bodies and in addition leads to
changes within the CNS (Nee and Butler, 2006; Zusman, 2009;
Schmid et al., 2013).
Literature suggests it is movement of sensitised neural connective tissue that is involved in this response (Coppieters et al.,
2005, 2006; Nee et al., 2012; Schmid et al., 2012). However it has
also been considered that stretching of compromised blood vessels,
lymphatics, fascia or other multi-segmental tissue may produce a
similar effect of pain arising from limited movement of distant body
parts (Wilson, 1994; Kelley and Jull, 1998; Walsh, 2005).
Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
The inclusion of endocrine and immune state in this subcategory arises as hormonal and chemical inuences are likely to
have an enhanced affect locally to tissue that is already exposed to
some degree of inammation, ischaemia or other tissue threat
(Jnig et al., 2006; Watkins et al., 2007).
Mechanical deformation
Chemical stimulation
It can be expected that when manual therapists are faced with
predominantly nociceptive presentations in the clinical setting,
they will be dealing with the chemical sequalae associated with
tissue damage. By the time the injured person arrives at a clinic,
tissues are generally not still being subjected to supra-threshold
mechanical stressors e.g. the stressors sustained by a ligament at
time of injury are no longer at play. The chemical nociceptive
contribution to pain can be explained by the increased concentration of inammatory substances (sometimes called the sensitising
soup) stimulating free nerve endings of nociceptors and lowering
thresholds of activation (Siddall and Cousins, 1997; Schmelz et al.,
2003; Bove, 2008; Richards and McMahon, 2013). This peripheral
sensitisation is most useful, as the resultant tenderness promotes
protection of vulnerable injured tissue and is utilised by therapists
to identify the potential location of supercial tissue pathology
with reasonable accuracy. Evidence of inammation and tissue
disease or damage can help with estimations of the contribution of
local stimulation to the persons pain experience (Smart et al.,
2012c). However it is important the therapist is making judgements based on the prevailing pain mechanisms i.e. prevalence of
sensitising chemicals, not simply that tissue damage equals pain.
An additional challenge to the chemical milieu is ischaemia. This
may be due to circulatory disorders, or postural or movement
limitations, altering tissue pH that in turn triggers chemical nociceptors (Steen and Reeh, 1993; Hodges and Tucker, 2011).
Fig. 5. Local Stimulation Category. (Available under licence CC BY-NC Aus 3.0 at http://
latrobe.libguides.com/content.php?pid=109542&sid825367).
Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010
design should encourage the selection of more sophisticated measures of the human pain experience, over simple pain ratings.
Conclusion
The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model is a simple tool to
assist manual therapists reason through the complexities of the
human pain experience. As an introduction to clinical reasoning, it
highlights the need to address all dimensions of the pain experience and allows the therapist to document his or her estimate of
the relevant contributions of the identied categories. By highlighting the range of contributors to an individuals pain experience, the Model also has the potential to increase the number of
treatment options considered by a therapist, which will lead to the
effective treatment of pain.
Reasoning for pain presentations and movement dysfunction
will always be a complex process for therapists. The Model presented aims to provide structure to this work by acknowledging
that central, regional and local factors can co-exist, yet management needs to be directed to what is the principal inuence in the
clinical presentation.
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Please cite this article in press as: Jones LE, OShaughnessy DFP, The Pain and Movement Reasoning Model: Introduction to a simple tool for
integrated pain assessment, Manual Therapy (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.math.2014.01.010