Definition of the word pain

Noun



The medication may upset your stomach but if you experience acute abdominal pain call your doctor.



I’ve had chronic back pain since the accident.



The medicine provides 12 hours of pain relief.



I feel a dull pain if I touch the bruise.



the pain of a difficult childhood



It is a story about the joys and pains of life.



Rush hour traffic is such a pain.



This orange is a pain to peel.

Verb



As much as it pains me to admit it, she was right.



my poor head was paining so from all that racket

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Recent Examples on the Web



This tissue, when overused or overstretched, can become inflamed, causing pain.


Cori Ritchey, Men’s Health, 8 Apr. 2023





Other changes indicate that woolly mammoths may have had altered cold sensation, such as the ability to feel pain in reaction to cold temperatures.


Jeanne Timmons, Ars Technica, 7 Apr. 2023





Per the lawsuit, Mars informed the band before their world tour with Def Leppard began that due to his pain, the United States leg would be his last tour.


Daniela Avila, Peoplemag, 7 Apr. 2023





Other data hint at more employment pain to come.


Christopher Decker, Fortune, 7 Apr. 2023





So much joy, so much pain.


Chelsey Sanchez, Harper’s BAZAAR, 7 Apr. 2023





Do cushioned running shoes cause knee pain?


Ravi Davda, Health, 6 Apr. 2023





Too many things are going on in the body to feel pain.


Abbey White, The Hollywood Reporter, 6 Apr. 2023





In patients undergoing invasive surgical procedures, listening to relaxing music can decrease their levels of the stress hormone cortisol and reduce pain.


Claire Bugos, Verywell Health, 6 Apr. 2023




Sweat soaked his shirt and his expression was pained.


Bill Pennington Doug Mills, New York Times, 6 Apr. 2023





The crowd’s laughter is pained.


Rob Sheffield, Rolling Stone, 25 Mar. 2023





While Jimmy, Gaby and Paul (Ford) often struggle to articulate the things that pain them, Liz can shout her problems from the rooftops.


Emily Longeretta, Variety, 24 Mar. 2023





In fact, Malcolm is pained by her own seeming indifference to her mother’s needs and desperations.


Sam Adler-bell, The New Republic, 20 Mar. 2023





The ruthless homicide has pained our community.


Christine Pelisek, Peoplemag, 16 Mar. 2023





People who, even now, keep faith in the Academy Awards, and in their power to sprinkle blessings upon a noble vocation, are pained not by controversy, grandstanding, political interference, ardent arguments over diversity, or fond lampoons.


Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, 13 Mar. 2023





The burst bubble in digital assets and decentralized finance (DeFi) has attracted acute attention, but also pain for millions of investors given that by mid-2021 more than 16% of the American population had bought into the crypto craze.


Angus Finney, Variety, 19 Sep. 2022





So they’re used to pain, they’re used to fighting through it.


Dalton Ross, EW.com, 1 Sep. 2021



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These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘pain.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Pain is a distressing feeling often caused by intense or damaging stimuli. The International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as «an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage.»[1]

Pain
Wrist pain.jpg
An illustration of wrist pain
Specialty Neurology
Pain medicine
Symptoms Unpleasant sensory and emotional sensations[1]
Duration Typically depends on the cause
Types Physical, psychological, psychogenic
Medication Analgesic

Pain motivates us to withdraw from damaging situations, to protect a damaged body part while it heals, and to avoid similar experiences in the future.[2] Most pain resolves once the noxious stimulus is removed and the body has healed, but it may persist despite removal of the stimulus and apparent healing of the body. Sometimes pain arises in the absence of any detectable stimulus, damage or disease.[3]

Pain is the most common reason for physician consultation in most developed countries.[4][5] It is a major symptom in many medical conditions, and can interfere with a person’s quality of life and general functioning.[6] People in pain experience impaired concentration, working memory, mental flexibility, problem solving and information processing speed, and are more likely to experience irritability, depression and anxiety.

Simple pain medications are useful in 20% to 70% of cases.[7] Psychological factors such as social support, cognitive behavioral therapy, excitement, or distraction can affect pain’s intensity or unpleasantness.[8][9]

EtymologyEdit

First attested in English in 1297, the word peyn comes from the Old French peine, in turn from Latin poena meaning «punishment, penalty»[10][11] (also meaning «torment, hardship, suffering» in Late Latin) and that from Greek ποινή (poine), generally meaning «price paid, penalty, punishment».[12][13]

ClassificationEdit

The International Association for the Study of Pain recommends using specific features to describe a patient’s pain:

  1. region of the body involved (e.g. abdomen, lower limbs),
  2. system whose dysfunction may be causing the pain (e.g., nervous, gastrointestinal),
  3. duration and pattern of occurrence,
  4. intensity, and
  5. cause[14]

Chronic versus acuteEdit

Pain is usually transitory, lasting only until the noxious stimulus is removed or the underlying damage or pathology has healed, but some painful conditions, such as rheumatoid arthritis, peripheral neuropathy, cancer and idiopathic pain, may persist for years. Pain that lasts a long time is called «chronic» or «persistent», and pain that resolves quickly is called «acute». Traditionally, the distinction between acute and chronic pain has relied upon an arbitrary interval of time between onset and resolution; the two most commonly used markers being 3 months and 6 months since the onset of pain,[15] though some theorists and researchers have placed the transition from acute to chronic pain at 12 months.[16]: 93  Others apply «acute» to pain that lasts less than 30 days, «chronic» to pain of more than six months’ duration, and «subacute» to pain that lasts from one to six months.[17] A popular alternative definition of «chronic pain», involving no arbitrarily fixed duration, is «pain that extends beyond the expected period of healing».[15] Chronic pain may be classified as «cancer-related» or «benign.»[17]

AllodyniaEdit

Allodynia is pain experienced in response to a normally painless stimulus.[18] It has no biological function and is classified by stimuli into dynamic mechanical, punctate and static.[18][19]

PhantomEdit

Phantom pain is pain felt in a part of the body that has been amputated, or from which the brain no longer receives signals. It is a type of neuropathic pain.[20]

The prevalence of phantom pain in upper limb amputees is nearly 82%, and in lower limb amputees is 54%.[20] One study found that eight days after amputation, 72% of patients had phantom limb pain, and six months later, 67% reported it.[21][22] Some amputees experience continuous pain that varies in intensity or quality; others experience several bouts of pain per day, or it may reoccur less often. It is often described as shooting, crushing, burning or cramping. If the pain is continuous for a long period, parts of the intact body may become sensitized, so that touching them evokes pain in the phantom limb. Phantom limb pain may accompany urination or defecation.[23]: 61–69 

Local anesthetic injections into the nerves or sensitive areas of the stump may relieve pain for days, weeks, or sometimes permanently, despite the drug wearing off in a matter of hours; and small injections of hypertonic saline into the soft tissue between vertebrae produces local pain that radiates into the phantom limb for ten minutes or so and may be followed by hours, weeks or even longer of partial or total relief from phantom pain. Vigorous vibration or electrical stimulation of the stump, or current from electrodes surgically implanted onto the spinal cord, all produce relief in some patients.[23]: 61–69 

Mirror box therapy produces the illusion of movement and touch in a phantom limb which in turn may cause a reduction in pain.[24]

Paraplegia, the loss of sensation and voluntary motor control after serious spinal cord damage, may be accompanied by girdle pain at the level of the spinal cord damage, visceral pain evoked by a filling bladder or bowel, or, in five to ten per cent of paraplegics, phantom body pain in areas of complete sensory loss. This phantom body pain is initially described as burning or tingling but may evolve into severe crushing or pinching pain, or the sensation of fire running down the legs or of a knife twisting in the flesh. Onset may be immediate or may not occur until years after the disabling injury. Surgical treatment rarely provides lasting relief.[23]: 61–69 

BreakthroughEdit

Breakthrough pain is transitory pain that comes on suddenly and is not alleviated by the patient’s regular pain management. It is common in cancer patients who often have background pain that is generally well-controlled by medications, but who also sometimes experience bouts of severe pain that from time to time «breaks through» the medication. The characteristics of breakthrough cancer pain vary from person to person and according to the cause. Management of breakthrough pain can entail intensive use of opioids, including fentanyl.[25][26]

Asymbolia and insensitivityEdit

A patient and doctor discuss congenital insensitivity to pain.

The ability to experience pain is essential for protection from injury, and recognition of the presence of injury. Episodic analgesia may occur under special circumstances, such as in the excitement of sport or war: a soldier on the battlefield may feel no pain for many hours from a traumatic amputation or other severe injury.[27]

Although unpleasantness is an essential part of the IASP definition of pain,[28] it is possible to induce a state described as intense pain devoid of unpleasantness in some patients, with morphine injection or psychosurgery.[29] Such patients report that they have pain but are not bothered by it; they recognize the sensation of pain but suffer little, or not at all.[30] Indifference to pain can also rarely be present from birth; these people have normal nerves on medical investigations, and find pain unpleasant, but do not avoid repetition of the pain stimulus.[31]

Insensitivity to pain may also result from abnormalities in the nervous system. This is usually the result of acquired damage to the nerves, such as spinal cord injury, diabetes mellitus (diabetic neuropathy), or leprosy in countries where that disease is prevalent.[32] These individuals are at risk of tissue damage and infection due to undiscovered injuries. People with diabetes-related nerve damage, for instance, sustain poorly-healing foot ulcers as a result of decreased sensation.[33]

A much smaller number of people are insensitive to pain due to an inborn abnormality of the nervous system, known as «congenital insensitivity to pain».[31] Children with this condition incur carelessly-repeated damage to their tongues, eyes, joints, skin, and muscles. Some die before adulthood, and others have a reduced life expectancy.[citation needed] Most people with congenital insensitivity to pain have one of five hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies (which includes familial dysautonomia and congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis).[34] These conditions feature decreased sensitivity to pain together with other neurological abnormalities, particularly of the autonomic nervous system.[31][34] A very rare syndrome with isolated congenital insensitivity to pain has been linked with mutations in the SCN9A gene, which codes for a sodium channel (Nav1.7) necessary in conducting pain nerve stimuli.[35]

Functional effectsEdit

Experimental subjects challenged by acute pain and patients in chronic pain experience impairments in attention control, working memory, mental flexibility, problem solving, and information processing speed.[36] Acute and chronic pain are also associated with increased depression, anxiety, fear, and anger.[37]

If I have matters right, the consequences of pain will include direct physical distress, unemployment, financial difficulties, marital disharmony, and difficulties in concentration and attention…

— Harold Merskey 2000[38]

On subsequent negative emotionEdit

Although pain is considered to be aversive and unpleasant and is therefore usually avoided, a meta-analysis which summarized and evaluated numerous studies from various psychological disciplines, found a reduction in negative affect. Across studies, participants that were subjected to acute physical pain in the laboratory subsequently reported feeling better than those in non-painful control conditions, a finding which was also reflected in physiological parameters.[39] A potential mechanism to explain this effect is provided by the opponent-process theory.

TheoryEdit

HistoricalEdit

Before the relatively recent discovery of neurons and their role in pain, various different body functions were proposed to account for pain. There were several competing early theories of pain among the ancient Greeks: Hippocrates believed that it was due to an imbalance in vital fluids.[40] In the 11th century, Avicenna theorized that there were a number of feeling senses including touch, pain and titillation.[41]

In 1644, René Descartes theorized that pain was a disturbance that passed along nerve fibers until the disturbance reached the brain.[40][42] Descartes’s work, along with Avicenna’s, prefigured the 19th-century development of specificity theory. Specificity theory saw pain as «a specific sensation, with its own sensory apparatus independent of touch and other senses».[43] Another theory that came to prominence in the 18th and 19th centuries was intensive theory, which conceived of pain not as a unique sensory modality, but an emotional state produced by stronger than normal stimuli such as intense light, pressure or temperature.[44] By the mid-1890s, specificity was backed mostly by physiologists and physicians, and the intensive theory was mostly backed by psychologists. However, after a series of clinical observations by Henry Head and experiments by Max von Frey, the psychologists migrated to specificity almost en masse, and by century’s end, most textbooks on physiology and psychology were presenting pain specificity as fact.[41][43]

ModernEdit

Regions of the cerebral cortex associated with pain

Some sensory fibers do not differentiate between noxious and non-noxious stimuli, while others, nociceptors, respond only to noxious, high intensity stimuli. At the peripheral end of the nociceptor, noxious stimuli generate currents that, above a given threshold, send signals along the nerve fiber to the spinal cord. The «specificity» (whether it responds to thermal, chemical or mechanical features of its environment) of a nociceptor is determined by which ion channels it expresses at its peripheral end. Dozens of different types of nociceptor ion channels have so far been identified, and their exact functions are still being determined.[45]

The pain signal travels from the periphery to the spinal cord along A-delta and C fibers. Because the A-delta fiber is thicker than the C fiber, and is thinly sheathed in an electrically insulating material (myelin), it carries its signal faster (5–30 m/s) than the unmyelinated C fiber (0.5–2 m/s).[46] Pain evoked by the A-delta fibers is described as sharp and is felt first. This is followed by a duller pain, often described as burning, carried by the C fibers.[47] These A-delta and C fibers enter the spinal cord via Lissauer’s tract and connect with spinal cord nerve fibers in the central gelatinous substance of the spinal cord. These spinal cord fibers then cross the cord via the anterior white commissure and ascend in the spinothalamic tract. Before reaching the brain, the spinothalamic tract splits into the lateral, neospinothalamic tract and the medial, paleospinothalamic tract. The neospinothalamic tract carries the fast, sharp A-delta signal to the ventral posterolateral nucleus of the thalamus. The paleospinothalamic tract carries the slow, dull, C-fiber pain signal. Some of the paleospinothalamic fibers peel off in the brain stem, connecting with the reticular formation or midbrain periaqueductal gray, and the remainder terminate in the intralaminar nuclei of the thalamus.[48]

Pain-related activity in the thalamus spreads to the insular cortex (thought to embody, among other things, the feeling that distinguishes pain from other homeostatic emotions such as itch and nausea) and anterior cingulate cortex (thought to embody, among other things, the affective/motivational element, the unpleasantness of pain),[49] and pain that is distinctly located also activates primary and secondary somatosensory cortex.[50]

Spinal cord fibers dedicated to carrying A-delta fiber pain signals, and others that carry both A-delta and C fiber pain signals to the thalamus have been identified. Other spinal cord fibers, known as wide dynamic range neurons, respond to A-delta and C fibers, but also to the much larger, more heavily myelinated A-beta fibers that carry touch, pressure and vibration signals.[46]

Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall introduced their gate control theory in the 1965 Science article «Pain Mechanisms: A New Theory».[51] The authors proposed that the thin C and A-delta (pain) and large diameter A-beta (touch, pressure, vibration) nerve fibers carry information from the site of injury to two destinations in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, and that A-beta fiber signals acting on inhibitory cells in the dorsal horn can reduce the intensity of pain signals sent to the brain.[42]

Three dimensions of painEdit

In 1968 Ronald Melzack and Kenneth Casey described chronic pain in terms of its three dimensions:

  • «sensory-discriminative» (sense of the intensity, location, quality and duration of the pain),
  • «affective-motivational» (unpleasantness and urge to escape the unpleasantness), and
  • «cognitive-evaluative» (cognitions such as appraisal, cultural values, distraction and hypnotic suggestion).

They theorized that pain intensity (the sensory discriminative dimension) and unpleasantness (the affective-motivational dimension) are not simply determined by the magnitude of the painful stimulus, but «higher» cognitive activities can influence perceived intensity and unpleasantness. Cognitive activities may affect both sensory and affective experience or they may modify primarily the affective-motivational dimension. Thus, excitement in games or war appears to block both the sensory-discriminative and affective-motivational dimensions of pain, while suggestion and placebos may modulate only the affective-motivational dimension and leave the sensory-discriminative dimension relatively undisturbed.[52] (p. 432)

The paper ends with a call to action: «Pain can be treated not only by trying to cut down the sensory input by anesthetic block, surgical intervention and the like, but also by influencing the motivational-affective and cognitive factors as well.»[52] (p. 435)

Evolutionary and behavioral roleEdit

Pain is part of the body’s defense system, producing a reflexive retraction from the painful stimulus, and tendencies to protect the affected body part while it heals, and avoid that harmful situation in the future.[53][54] It is an important part of animal life, vital to healthy survival. People with congenital insensitivity to pain have reduced life expectancy.[31]

In The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution, biologist Richard Dawkins addresses the question of why pain should have the quality of being painful. He describes the alternative as a mental raising of a «red flag». To argue why that red flag might be insufficient, Dawkins argues that drives must compete with one other within living beings. The most «fit» creature would be the one whose pains are well balanced. Those pains which mean certain death when ignored will become the most powerfully felt. The relative intensities of pain, then, may resemble the relative importance of that risk to our ancestors.[a] This resemblance will not be perfect, however, because natural selection can be a poor designer. This may have maladaptive results such as supernormal stimuli.[55]

Pain, however, does not only wave a «red flag» within living beings but may also act as a warning sign and a call for help to other living beings. Especially in humans who readily helped each other in case of sickness or injury throughout their evolutionary history, pain might be shaped by natural selection to be a credible and convincing signal of need for relief, help, and care.[56]

Idiopathic pain (pain that persists after the trauma or pathology has healed, or that arises without any apparent cause) may be an exception to the idea that pain is helpful to survival, although some psychodynamic psychologists argue that such pain is psychogenic, enlisted as a protective distraction to keep dangerous emotions unconscious.[57]

ThresholdsEdit

In pain science, thresholds are measured by gradually increasing the intensity of a stimulus in a procedure called quantitative sensory testing which involves such stimuli as electric current, thermal (heat or cold), mechanical (pressure, touch, vibration), ischemic, or chemical stimuli applied to the subject to evoke a response.[58] The «pain perception threshold» is the point at which the subject begins to feel pain, and the «pain threshold intensity» is the stimulus intensity at which the stimulus begins to hurt. The «pain tolerance threshold» is reached when the subject acts to stop the pain.[58]

AssessmentEdit

A person’s self-report is the most reliable measure of pain.[59][60][61] Some health care professionals may underestimate pain severity.[62] A definition of pain widely employed in nursing, emphasizing its subjective nature and the importance of believing patient reports, was introduced by Margo McCaffery in 1968: «Pain is whatever the experiencing person says it is, existing whenever he says it does».[63] To assess intensity, the patient may be asked to locate their pain on a scale of 0 to 10, with 0 being no pain at all, and 10 the worst pain they have ever felt. Quality can be established by having the patient complete the McGill Pain Questionnaire indicating which words best describe their pain.[6]

Visual analogue scaleEdit

The visual analogue scale is a common, reproducible tool in the assessment of pain and pain relief.[64] The scale is a continuous line anchored by verbal descriptors, one for each extreme of pain where a higher score indicates greater pain intensity. It is usually 10 cm in length with no intermediate descriptors as to avoid marking of scores around a preferred numeric value. When applied as a pain descriptor, these anchors are often ‘no pain’ and ‘worst imaginable pain». Cut-offs for pain classification have been recommended as no pain (0–4mm), mild pain (5–44mm), moderate pain (45–74mm) and severe pain (75–100mm).[65][check quotation syntax]

Multidimensional pain inventoryEdit

The Multidimensional Pain Inventory (MPI) is a questionnaire designed to assess the psychosocial state of a person with chronic pain. Combining the MPI characterization of the person with their IASP five-category pain profile is recommended for deriving the most useful case description.[15]

Assessment in non-verbal peopleEdit

Non-verbal people cannot use words to tell others that they are experiencing pain. However, they may be able to communicate through other means, such as blinking, pointing, or nodding.[66]

With a non-communicative person, observation becomes critical, and specific behaviors can be monitored as pain indicators. Behaviors such as facial grimacing and guarding (trying to protect part of the body from being bumped or touched) indicate pain, as well as an increase or decrease in vocalizations, changes in routine behavior patterns and mental status changes. Patients experiencing pain may exhibit withdrawn social behavior and possibly experience a decreased appetite and decreased nutritional intake. A change in condition that deviates from baseline, such as moaning with movement or when manipulating a body part, and limited range of motion are also potential pain indicators. In patients who possess language but are incapable of expressing themselves effectively, such as those with dementia, an increase in confusion or display of aggressive behaviors or agitation may signal that discomfort exists, and further assessment is necessary. Changes in behavior may be noticed by caregivers who are familiar with the person’s normal behavior.[66]

Infants do feel pain, but lack the language needed to report it, and so communicate distress by crying. A non-verbal pain assessment should be conducted involving the parents, who will notice changes in the infant which may not be obvious to the health care provider. Pre-term babies are more sensitive to painful stimuli than those carried to full term.[67]

Another approach, when pain is suspected, is to give the person treatment for pain, and then watch to see whether the suspected indicators of pain subside.[66]

Other reporting barriersEdit

The way in which one experiences and responds to pain is related to sociocultural characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity, and age.[68][69] An aging adult may not respond to pain in the same way that a younger person might. Their ability to recognize pain may be blunted by illness or the use of medication. Depression may also keep older adult from reporting they are in pain. Decline in self-care may also indicate the older adult is experiencing pain. They may be reluctant to report pain because they do not want to be perceived as weak, or may feel it is impolite or shameful to complain, or they may feel the pain is a form of deserved punishment.[70][71]

Cultural barriers may also affect the likelihood of reporting pain. Patients may feel that certain treatments go against their religious beliefs. They may not report pain because they feel it is a sign that death is near. Many people fear the stigma of addiction, and avoid pain treatment so as not to be prescribed potentially addicting drugs. Many Asians do not want to lose respect in society by admitting they are in pain and need help, believing the pain should be borne in silence, while other cultures feel they should report pain immediately to receive immediate relief.[67]

Gender can also be a perceived factor in reporting pain. Gender differences can be the result of social and cultural expectations, with women expected to be more emotional and show pain, and men more stoic.[67] As a result, female pain is often stigmatized, leading to less urgent treatment of women based on social expectations of their ability to accurately report it.[72] This leads to extended emergency room wait times for women and frequent dismissal of their ability to accurately report pain.[73][74]

Diagnostic aidEdit

Pain is a symptom of many medical conditions. Knowing the time of onset, location, intensity, pattern of occurrence (continuous, intermittent, etc.), exacerbating and relieving factors, and quality (burning, sharp, etc.) of the pain will help the examining physician to accurately diagnose the problem. For example, chest pain described as extreme heaviness may indicate myocardial infarction, while chest pain described as tearing may indicate aortic dissection.[75][76]

Physiological measurementEdit

Functional magnetic resonance imaging brain scanning has been used to measure pain, and correlates well with self-reported pain.[77][78][79]

MechanismsEdit

NociceptiveEdit

Mechanism of nociceptive pain

Nociceptive pain is caused by stimulation of sensory nerve fibers that respond to stimuli approaching or exceeding harmful intensity (nociceptors), and may be classified according to the mode of noxious stimulation. The most common categories are «thermal» (e.g. heat or cold), «mechanical» (e.g. crushing, tearing, shearing, etc.) and «chemical» (e.g. iodine in a cut or chemicals released during inflammation). Some nociceptors respond to more than one of these modalities and are consequently designated polymodal.

Nociceptive pain may also be classed according to the site of origin and divided into «visceral», «deep somatic» and «superficial somatic» pain. Visceral structures (e.g., the heart, liver and intestines) are highly sensitive to stretch, ischemia and inflammation, but relatively insensitive to other stimuli that normally evoke pain in other structures, such as burning and cutting. Visceral pain is diffuse, difficult to locate and often referred to a distant, usually superficial, structure. It may be accompanied by nausea and vomiting and may be described as sickening, deep, squeezing, and dull.[80] Deep somatic pain is initiated by stimulation of nociceptors in ligaments, tendons, bones, blood vessels, fasciae and muscles, and is dull, aching, poorly-localized pain. Examples include sprains and broken bones. Superficial somatic pain is initiated by activation of nociceptors in the skin or other superficial tissue, and is sharp, well-defined and clearly located. Examples of injuries that produce superficial somatic pain include minor wounds and minor (first degree) burns.[16]

NeuropathicEdit

Neuropathic pain is caused by damage or disease affecting any part of the nervous system involved in bodily feelings (the somatosensory system).[81] Neuropathic pain may be divided into peripheral, central, or mixed (peripheral and central) neuropathic pain. Peripheral neuropathic pain is often described as «burning», «tingling», «electrical», «stabbing», or «pins and needles».[82] Bumping the «funny bone» elicits acute peripheral neuropathic pain.

Some manifestations of neuropathic pain include: traumatic neuropathy, tic douloureux, painful diabetic neuropathy, and postherpetic neuralgia.[83]

NociplasticEdit

Nociplastic pain is pain characterized by a changed nociception (but without evidence of real or threatened tissue damage, or without disease or damage in the somatosensory system).[9]

PsychogenicEdit

Psychogenic pain, also called psychalgia or somatoform pain, is pain caused, increased or prolonged by mental, emotional or behavioral factors.[84] Headache, back pain and stomach pain are sometimes diagnosed as psychogenic.[84] Those affected are often stigmatized, because both medical professionals and the general public tend to think that pain from a psychological source is not «real». However, specialists consider that it is no less actual or hurtful than pain from any other source.[29]

People with long-term pain frequently display psychological disturbance, with elevated scores on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory scales of hysteria, depression and hypochondriasis (the «neurotic triad»). Some investigators have argued that it is this neuroticism that causes acute pain to turn chronic, but clinical evidence points the other direction, to chronic pain causing neuroticism. When long-term pain is relieved by therapeutic intervention, scores on the neurotic triad and anxiety fall, often to normal levels. Self-esteem, often low in chronic pain patients, also shows improvement once pain has resolved.[23]: 31–32 

ManagementEdit

Pain can be treated through a variety of methods. The most appropriate method depends upon the situation. Management of chronic pain can be difficult and may require the coordinated efforts of a pain management team, which typically includes medical practitioners, clinical pharmacists, clinical psychologists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners.[85]

Inadequate treatment of pain is widespread throughout surgical wards, intensive care units, and accident and emergency departments, in general practice, in the management of all forms of chronic pain including cancer pain, and in end of life care.[86][87][88][89][90][91][92] This neglect extends to all ages, from newborns to medically frail elderly.[93][94] In the US, African and Hispanic Americans are more likely than others to suffer unnecessarily while in the care of a physician;[95][96] and women’s pain is more likely to be undertreated than men’s.[97]

The International Association for the Study of Pain advocates that the relief of pain should be recognized as a human right, that chronic pain should be considered a disease in its own right, and that pain medicine should have the full status of a medical specialty.[98] It is a specialty only in China and Australia at this time.[99] Elsewhere, pain medicine is a subspecialty under disciplines such as anesthesiology, physiatry, neurology, palliative medicine and psychiatry.[100] In 2011, Human Rights Watch alerted that tens of millions of people worldwide are still denied access to inexpensive medications for severe pain.[101]

MedicationEdit

Acute pain is usually managed with medications such as analgesics and anesthetics.[102] Caffeine when added to pain medications such as ibuprofen, may provide some additional benefit.[103][104] Ketamine can be used instead of opioids for short-term pain.[105] Pain medications can cause paradoxical side effects, such as opioid-induced hyperalgesia (severe generalized pain caused by long-term opioid use).[106][107]

Sugar (sucrose) when taken by mouth reduces pain in newborn babies undergoing some medical procedures (a lancing of the heel, venipuncture, and intramuscular injections). Sugar does not remove pain from circumcision, and it is unknown if sugar reduces pain for other procedures.[108] Sugar did not affect pain-related electrical activity in the brains of newborns one second after the heel lance procedure.[109] Sweet liquid by mouth moderately reduces the rate and duration of crying caused by immunization injection in children between one and twelve months of age.[110]

PsychologicalEdit

Individuals with more social support experience less cancer pain, take less pain medication, report less labor pain and are less likely to use epidural anesthesia during childbirth, or suffer from chest pain after coronary artery bypass surgery.[8]

Suggestion can significantly affect pain intensity. About 35% of people report marked relief after receiving a saline injection they believed to be morphine. This placebo effect is more pronounced in people who are prone to anxiety, and so anxiety reduction may account for some of the effect, but it does not account for all of it. Placebos are more effective for intense pain than mild pain; and they produce progressively weaker effects with repeated administration.[23]: 26–28  It is possible for many with chronic pain to become so absorbed in an activity or entertainment that the pain is no longer felt, or is greatly diminished.[23]: 22–23 

A number of meta-analyses have found clinical hypnosis to be effective in controlling pain associated with diagnostic and surgical procedures in both adults and children, as well as pain associated with cancer and childbirth.[111] A 2007 review of 13 studies found evidence for the efficacy of hypnosis in the reduction of chronic pain under some conditions, though the number of patients enrolled in the studies was low, raising issues related to the statistical power to detect group differences, and most lacked credible controls for placebo or expectation. The authors concluded that «although the findings provide support for the general applicability of hypnosis in the treatment of chronic pain, considerably more research will be needed to fully determine the effects of hypnosis for different chronic-pain conditions.»[112]

Alternative medicineEdit

An analysis of the 13 highest quality studies of pain treatment with acupuncture, published in January 2009, concluded there was little difference in the effect of real, faked and no acupuncture.[113] However, more recent reviews have found some benefit.[114][115][116] Additionally, there is tentative evidence for a few herbal medicines.[117] There has been some interest in the relationship between vitamin D and pain, but the evidence so far from controlled trials for such a relationship, other than in osteomalacia, is inconclusive.[118]

For chronic (long-term) lower back pain, spinal manipulation produces tiny, clinically insignificant, short-term improvements in pain and function, compared with sham therapy and other interventions.[119] Spinal manipulation produces the same outcome as other treatments, such as general practitioner care, pain-relief drugs, physical therapy, and exercise, for acute (short-term) lower back pain.[119]

EpidemiologyEdit

Pain is the main reason for visiting an emergency department in more than 50% of cases,[120] and is present in 30% of family practice visits.[121] Several epidemiological studies have reported widely varying prevalence rates for chronic pain, ranging from 12 to 80% of the population.[122] It becomes more common as people approach death. A study of 4,703 patients found that 26% had pain in the last two years of life, increasing to 46% in the last month.[123]

A survey of 6,636 children (0–18 years of age) found that, of the 5,424 respondents, 54% had experienced pain in the preceding three months. A quarter reported having experienced recurrent or continuous pain for three months or more, and a third of these reported frequent and intense pain. The intensity of chronic pain was higher for girls, and girls’ reports of chronic pain increased markedly between ages 12 and 14.[124]

Society and cultureEdit

Physical pain is a universal experience, and a strong motivator of human and animal behavior. As such, physical pain is used politically in relation to various issues such as pain management policy, drug control, animal rights or animal welfare, torture, and pain compliance. The deliberate infliction of pain and the medical management of pain are both important aspects of biopower, a concept that encompasses the «set of mechanisms through which the basic biological features of the human species became the object of a political strategy».[125]

In various contexts, the deliberate infliction of pain in the form of corporal punishment is used as retribution for an offence, for the purpose of disciplining or reforming a wrongdoer, or to deter attitudes or behaviour deemed unacceptable. In Western societies, the intentional infliction of severe pain (torture) was principally used to extract confession prior to its abolition in the latter part of the 19th century. Torture as a means to punish the citizen has been reserved for offences posing severe threat to the social fabric (for example, treason).[126]

The administration of torture on bodies othered by the cultural narrative, those observed as not ‘full members of society’ [126]: 101–121[AD1]  met a resurgence in the 20th century, possibly due to the heightened warfare.[126]: 101–121 [AD2] 

Many cultures use painful ritual practices as a catalyst for psychological transformation.[127] The use of pain to transition to a ‘cleansed and purified’ state is seen in Catholic self-flagellation practices, or personal catharsis in neo-primitive body suspension experiences.[128]

Beliefs about pain play an important role in sporting cultures. Pain may be viewed positively, exemplified by the ‘no pain, no gain’ attitude, with pain seen as an essential part of training. Sporting culture tends to normalise experiences of pain and injury and celebrate athletes who ‘play hurt’.[129]

Pain has psychological, social, and physical dimensions, and is greatly influenced by cultural factors.[130]

Non-humansEdit

René Descartes argued that animals lack consciousness and therefore do not experience pain and suffering in the way that humans do.[131] Bernard Rollin of Colorado State University, the principal author of two U.S. federal laws regulating pain relief for animals,[b] wrote that researchers remained unsure into the 1980s as to whether animals experience pain, and that veterinarians trained in the U.S. before 1989 were simply taught to ignore animal pain.[133][134] The ability of invertebrate species of animals, such as insects, to feel pain and suffering is unclear.[135][136][137]

Specialists believe that all vertebrates can feel pain, and that certain invertebrates, like the octopus, may also.[135][138][139] The presence of pain in animals is unknown, but can be inferred through physical and behavioral reactions,[140] such as paw withdrawal from various noxious mechanical stimuli in rodents.[141]

While plants, as living beings, can perceive and communicate physical stimuli and damage, they do not feel pain simply because of the lack of any pain receptors, nerves, or a brain,[142] and, by extension, lack of consciousness.[143] Many plants are known to perceive and respond to mechanical stimuli at a cellular level, and some plants such as the venus flytrap or touch-me-not, are known for their «obvious sensory abilities».[142] Nevertheless, the plant kingdom as a whole do not feel pain notwithstanding their abilities to respond to sunlight, gravity, wind, and any external stimuli such as insect bites, since they lack any nervous system. The primary reason for this is that, unlike the members of the animal kingdom whose evolutionary successes and failures are shaped by suffering, the evolution of plants are simply shaped by life and death.[142]

See alsoEdit

  • Feeling, a perceptual state of conscious experience.
  • Hedonic adaptation, the tendency to quickly return to a relatively stable level of happiness despite major positive or negative events
  • Pain (philosophy), the branch of philosophy concerned with suffering and physical pain
  • Pain and suffering, the legal term for the physical and emotional stress caused from an injury

Explanatory notesEdit

  1. ^ For example, lack of food, extreme cold, or serious injuries are felt as exceptionally painful, whereas minor damage is felt as mere discomfort.
  2. ^ Rollin drafted the 1985 Health Research Extension Act and an animal welfare amendment to the 1985 Food Security Act.[132]

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  • Casey K (2019). Chasing Pain: The Search for a Neurobiological Mechanism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190880231.

External linksEdit

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  • Pain at Curlie
  • «Pain», Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

pain

to feel hurt; suffering; misery; torment; ache, agony, anguish

Not to be confused with:

pane – a glass-filled section of a window or door

pang – a sudden sharp feeling of distress or longing: a pang of desire; a pang of guilt; twinge, ache, throb, stab

Abused, Confused, & Misused Words by Mary Embree Copyright © 2007, 2013 by Mary Embree

pain

 (pān)

n.

1.

a. An unpleasant feeling occurring as a result of injury or disease, usually localized in some part of the body: felt pains in his chest.

b. Bodily suffering characterized by such feelings: drugs to treat pain.

2.

a. Mental or emotional suffering; distress.

b. An instance of this: the pains of humiliation.

3. pains The pangs of childbirth.

4. pains Great care or effort: taking pains with one’s work.

5. Informal A source of annoyance; a nuisance: Stuffing all these envelopes is a real pain.

tr.v. pained, pain·ing, pains

1. To cause physical pain to; hurt: My feet really pained me after the hike.

2. To cause mental or emotional distress to: «It pained him to remember every little thing about her» (John Irving).

Idiom:

on/under pain of

Subject to the penalty of (a specified punishment, such as death).


[Middle English, from Old French peine, from Latin poena, penalty, pain, from Greek poinē, penalty; see kwei- in Indo-European roots.]

Synonyms: pain, ache, pang, stitch, throe, twinge
These nouns denote a sensation of severe physical discomfort: abdominal pain; aches in my leg; the pangs of a cramped muscle; a stitch in my side; the throes of dying; a twinge of arthritis.

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

pain

(peɪn)

n

1. the sensation of acute physical hurt or discomfort caused by injury, illness, etc

2. emotional suffering or mental distress

3. on pain of subject to the penalty of

4. informal Also called: pain in the neck or pain in the arse (taboo)a person or thing that is a nuisance

vb (tr)

5. to cause (a person) distress, hurt, grief, anxiety, etc

6. informal to annoy; irritate

[C13: from Old French peine, from Latin poena punishment, grief, from Greek poinē penalty]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

pain

(peɪn)

n.

1. physical suffering typically from injury or illness.

2. an instance of such suffering; a distressing sensation in a part of the body: a back pain.

3. severe mental or emotional distress: the pain of loneliness.

4. pains,

a. assiduous care: Take pains with your work.

b. the uterine contractions of childbirth.

5. Also called pain in the neck. an annoying or troublesome person or thing.

v.t.

6. to cause physical or emotional pain to.

v.i.

7. to have or give pain.

Idioms:

on or under pain of, subject to the penalty of; risking: on pain of death.

[1250–1300; Middle English peine punishment, torture, pain < Old French < Latin poena penalty, pain < Greek poinḗ penalty]

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

pain

— Originally meant punishment for a crime or offense—sometimes by losing one’s head.

See also related terms for losing.

Farlex Trivia Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

Pain

producing pain.

a deriving of sexual pleasure from inflicting or enduring pain. Cf. masochism, sadism. — algolagnist, n. — algolagnic, adj.

measurement of pain by means of an algometer, an instrument for determining sensitivity to pain produced by pressure. — algometric, algometrical, adj.

a love of pain.

an extreme fear of pain. Cf. odynophobia.

otalgia.

pain in the nerves of the upper arm.

a burning or other painful feeling in the stomach or esophagus; heartburn.

Medicine.1. a pain in the head.
2. a headache. Also called cephalgia, cephalodynia.

pain in the hip joint.

neuralgia of the skin.

anything that drives away pain.

pain in the stomach or abdominal region.

1. Medicine. a pain or aching on one side of the head.
2. migraine.

hypalgia.

a decreased sensibility to pain. Also hypalgesia.

an unusually high sensitivity to pain. — hyperalgesic, adj.

pain in the uterus.

1. Psychiatry. a condition in which sexual gratification is achieved through suffering physical pain and humiliation, especially inflicted on oneself.
2. any gratification gained from pain or deprivation inflicted or imposed on oneself. Cf. sadism. — masochist, n. — masochistic, adj.

Medicine. a pain in a tooth. — odontalgic, adj.

an abnormal fear of pain.

Medicine. an earache. — otalgic, adj.

pain in the eyes caused by light.

pain in the rectum.

neuralgia affecting the face.

mental or psychic pain.

pain affecting the spine. — rachialgic, adj.

1. Psychiatry. a sexual gratification gained through causing physical pain or humiliation.
2. any enjoyment in being cruel. Cf. masochism. — sadist, n. — sadistic, adj.

Psychiatry. a condition of disturbed and destructive personality marked by the presence of both sadistic and masochistic traits. — sado-masochist, n. — sadomasochistic, adj.

an indifference to pleasure or pain. — stoic, n., adj. — stoical, adj.

pain in one part of the body resulting from hurt or injury in another part; referred pain.

pain in the womb or uterus.

sadism directed toward animals. — zoosadist, n. — zoosadistic, adj.

-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

Pain

 

See Also: HEALTH

  1. Ached from head to foot, all zones of pain seemingly interdependent … like a Christmas tree whose lights wired in series, must all go out if even one bulb is defective —J. D. Salinger
  2. Ached like a bad tooth —Lawrence Durrell
  3. The air burning my lungs like a red-hot iron or cutting into them like a sharpened razor —Albert Camus
  4. Anguish poured out like blood from a gaping wound —Jonathan Kellerman

    In Kellerman’s novel, When the Bough Breaks, the anguish is being poured out by a patient to the psychologist hero.

  5. Bruised like a half-back in a football game —Francis W. Crowninshield
  6. [Rash] burned like dots of acid —William Kennedy
  7. Cut like a whiplash —Ruth Chatterton
  8. (Walked out into) the dazzling sun that cut into his eyes like a knife —John Dos Passos
  9. A deadly vise of pain that clamped her head like a steel helmet —Arthur A. Cohen
  10. Exposed it [pain] like a beggar used to making a show of his sores —Julia O’Faolain
  11. Feel like somebody stuck thumbtacks all over my head —James Lee Burke
  12. Felt as if I’d been crushed between two runaway wardrobes —J. B. Priestly

    This “similistic” comment is made by the hero of Lost Empires after being beaten up.

  13. Felt as though his body were wrapped in layers of plaster cast —Kenzaburo Oë

    The plaster cast comparison was used by the author to describe a character who wakes up feeling stiff and achy all over.

  14. Felt her head was going to break open like a coconut struck with a hammer —Marge Piercy
  15. Felt pain like hot knives —Anon
  16. A flash of pain darted through her, like the ripple of sheet lightning —Edith Wharton
  17. For a second he remained in torture, as if some invisible flame were playing on him to reduce his bones and fuse him down —D.H. Lawrence
  18. A gash … as wide as an open grave —Jimmy Sangster
  19. Generalized racking misery that makes him feel as if his pores are bleeding and his brain is leaking out of his ears —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  20. A head like a sore tooth —Anon
  21. Her stomach reacted as though she’d eaten sulfuric pancakes —Rita Mae Brown
  22. An hour of pain is as long as a day of pleasure —English proverb
  23. The hurt had gone through her like the split in a carcass —Julia O’Faolain
  24. The hurt I felt … was something like a thumb struck with a hammer —MacDonald Harris
  25. Hurt … like a knot passing through an artery —Donald McCaig
  26. (My brother’s laugh is small, sharp, and) hurts like gravel in your shoe —Sharon Sheehe Stark
  27. It [the pain of failure] was like a gnawing physical disability, an ugly mark she wanted to hide —H. E. Bates
  28. A knot of pain was set like a malignant jewel in the core of his head —Truman Capote
  29. (Your letter was) like a bullet straight into my heart —Sholom Aleichem
  30. My back ached as if someone were holding a welding torch against my spine, turning the flame on and off at will —W. P. Kinsella
  31. My breast was contracted by a pain like screws clamped on my heart —Joyce Cary
  32. My insides burned like pipes in a boiler —Governeur Morris
  33. My intestines felt as if they were playing host to a Bears-Raiders game —Penny Ward Moser, Discover, February, 1987
  34. My stomach feels as if I have swallowed razor blades —W. P. Kinsella
  35. My stomach feels like the crop of a hen —Katherine Mansfield
  36. My whole body glows with pain as if I were being electrocuted —Iris Murdoch
  37. Nausea coiled like a snake in her stomach —A. E. Maxwell
  38. Pain and pleasure, like light and darkness, succeed each other —Laurence Sterne

    See Also: PLEASURE

  39. The pain between his eyes seemed to be whirling about like a pinwheel —R. Wright Campbell
  40. Pain comes billowing on like a full cloud of thunder —Dante Gabriel Rossetti
  41. Painful … like cutting the heart out of her body —Phyllis Bottome

    The pain described in Bottome’s short story, The Battle Field, is that of never seeing someone again.

  42. The pain goes ringing through me like alarms —Delmore Schwartz
  43. Pain … hard as blows —John Berryman
  44. The pain in his chest was like a tight breastplate —Graham Swift
  45. Pain is immune to empathy … like love —Barbara Lazear Ascher, New York Times/Hers, October 16, 1986
  46. Pain is like a love affair. When it’s over, it’s over —Elyse Sommer
  47. Pain lifted like a fog that gives way to bright sunlight —Maurice Edelman
  48. Pain … like a metal bar —Graham Swift
  49. Pain (lingering) … like a stone pit lodged in the stomach —Anon
  50. Pain rising as periodically as high water —William H. Gass
  51. (The sympathy that it arouses is as) painful as charity —Mihail Lermontov
  52. Pains are flinging her about like an old rag, a filthy torn rag doll —Vicki Baum
  53. The pain seemed to rock inside him like a weight that would overturn him —Graham Swift
  54. Pains … like streams of pulsating fire heating him to an intolerable temperature —Ambrose Bierce
  55. Pain … slopped through his head like water into a sand-castle —Kingsley Amis

    See Also: TURNING AND TWISTING

  56. Pains that shrieked like alarm bells —Jane Rogers
  57. Pain tightens like a strip of hot metal across Martin’s chest —Robert Silverberg
  58. Pain … twisting like currents in a river —Martin Amis
  59. Pain whistled through my body like splintered glass —Ross Macdonald
  60. Pain would advance and recede like waves on a beach —Nathaniel Benchley

    See Also: ADVANCING

  61. People in pain are like the wandering minstrels of the Renaissance. Any occupied space becomes their court. If the story’s told often enough, perhaps the demons will become manifest. Made visible and mastered through words —Barbara Lazear Ascher, New York Times/Hers, October 16, 1986
  62. A persistent jabbing in her chest that tapped back and forth like an admonishing finger —Molly Giles
  63. Pierce … like misplaced trust —John Drury
  64. (Though we love pleasure, we) play with pain like a tongue toying with a bad tooth —George Garrett
  65. The pounding in his head was like ten thousand hammers —Niven Busch
  66. Press like a blunt thumb —Lawrence Durrell
  67. Prolonged pain is like a fire in the house, it causes you to flee and wander homeless —Barbara Lazear Ascher, New York Times/Hers, October 16, 1986
  68. Shudder at the thrust of pain like a virgin at the thrust of love —George Garrett

    See Also: TREMBLING

  69. Spine ached as if it had been twisted like a cat’s tail —Bernard Malamud
  70. Sting you like scorn —Thomas Hardy
  71. (Irony …) stung like squirts from a leaky hose —Geoffrey Wolff
  72. Suffering is cheap as grass and free as the rain that falls on saint and sinner alike —George Garrett
  73. A sweet bewildering pain, like flowers in the wind and rain —Thomas Ashe
  74. [A broken ankle] swelled like a soccer ball —Clive Cussler
  75. Swollen face throbbing as if it has been pumped up with a bellows —Elena Poniatowska
  76. Throat … like sandpaper soaked in salt —H. E. Bates
  77. Throat … like a thicket of nettles —Arthur Train
  78. [The lack of respect] tormented him like a raging thirst —Marge Piercy
  79. Woke up feeling as if someone had tied sandbags to my hair —Jonathan Valin
  80. Writhed like a trampled snake —Oscar Wilde
  81. (Sat on a bench) writhing like a woman in labor —Isaac Babel
  82. Writhing … like the poor shell-fish set to boil alive —John Greenleaf Whittier

Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

pain

Past participle: pained
Gerund: paining

Imperative
pain
pain
Present
I pain
you pain
he/she/it pains
we pain
you pain
they pain
Preterite
I pained
you pained
he/she/it pained
we pained
you pained
they pained
Present Continuous
I am paining
you are paining
he/she/it is paining
we are paining
you are paining
they are paining
Present Perfect
I have pained
you have pained
he/she/it has pained
we have pained
you have pained
they have pained
Past Continuous
I was paining
you were paining
he/she/it was paining
we were paining
you were paining
they were paining
Past Perfect
I had pained
you had pained
he/she/it had pained
we had pained
you had pained
they had pained
Future
I will pain
you will pain
he/she/it will pain
we will pain
you will pain
they will pain
Future Perfect
I will have pained
you will have pained
he/she/it will have pained
we will have pained
you will have pained
they will have pained
Future Continuous
I will be paining
you will be paining
he/she/it will be paining
we will be paining
you will be paining
they will be paining
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been paining
you have been paining
he/she/it has been paining
we have been paining
you have been paining
they have been paining
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been paining
you will have been paining
he/she/it will have been paining
we will have been paining
you will have been paining
they will have been paining
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been paining
you had been paining
he/she/it had been paining
we had been paining
you had been paining
they had been paining
Conditional
I would pain
you would pain
he/she/it would pain
we would pain
you would pain
they would pain
Past Conditional
I would have pained
you would have pained
he/she/it would have pained
we would have pained
you would have pained
they would have pained

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun 1. pain - a symptom of some physical hurt or disorderpain — a symptom of some physical hurt or disorder; «the patient developed severe pain and distension»

hurting

symptom — (medicine) any sensation or change in bodily function that is experienced by a patient and is associated with a particular disease

ache, aching — a dull persistent (usually moderately intense) pain

excruciation, suffering, agony — a state of acute pain

arthralgia — pain in a joint or joints

burn, burning — pain that feels hot as if it were on fire

causalgia — a burning pain in a limb along the course of a peripheral nerve; usually associated with skin changes

colic, gripes, griping, intestinal colic — acute abdominal pain (especially in infants)

chest pain — pain in the chest

chiralgia — a pain in the hand that is not traumatic

distress — extreme physical pain; «the patient appeared to be in distress»

dysmenorrhea — painful menstruation

glossalgia, glossodynia — pain in the tongue

growing pains — pain in muscles or joints sometimes experienced by children and often attributed to rapid growth

haemorrhoid, hemorrhoid, piles — pain caused by venous swelling at or inside the anal sphincter

keratalgia — pain in the cornea

labor pain — pain and discomfort associated with contractions of the uterus during labor

mastalgia — pain in the breast

melagra — rheumatic or myalgic pains in the arms or legs

meralgia — pain in the thigh

metralgia — pain in the uterus

myalgia, myodynia — pain in a muscle or group of muscles

nephralgia — pain in the kidney (usually felt in the loins)

neuralgia, neuralgy — acute spasmodic pain along the course of one or more nerves

odynophagia — severe pain on swallowing due to a disorder of the esophagus

orchidalgia — pain in the testes

pang — a sharp spasm of pain

pang, sting — a mental pain or distress; «a pang of conscience»

photalgia, photophobia — pain in the eye resulting from exposure to bright light (often associated with albinism)

costalgia, pleuralgia, pleurodynia — pain in the chest caused by inflammation of the muscles between the ribs

podalgia — foot pain

proctalgia — pain in the rectum

referred pain — pain that is felt at a place in the body different from the injured or diseased part where the pain would be expected; «angina pectoris can cause referred pain in the left shoulder»; «pain in the right shoulder can be referred pain from gallbladder disease»

renal colic — sharp pain in the lower back that radiates into the groin; associated with the passage of a renal calculus through the ureter

smart, smarting, smartness — a kind of pain such as that caused by a wound or a burn or a sore

sting, stinging — a kind of pain; something as sudden and painful as being stung; «the sting of death»; «he felt the stinging of nettles»

stitch — a sharp spasm of pain in the side resulting from running

soreness, tenderness, rawness — a pain that is felt (as when the area is touched); «the best results are generally obtained by inserting the needle into the point of maximum tenderness»; «after taking a cold, rawness of the larynx and trachea come on»

thermalgesia — pain caused by heat

throb — a deep pulsating type of pain

torment, torture — unbearable physical pain

ulalgia — pain in the gums

urodynia — pain during urination

2. pain — emotional distress; a fundamental feeling that people try to avoid; «the pain of loneliness»

painfulness

feeling — the experiencing of affective and emotional states; «she had a feeling of euphoria»; «he had terrible feelings of guilt»; «I disliked him and the feeling was mutual»

growing pains — emotional distress arising during adolescence

unpleasantness — the feeling caused by disagreeable stimuli; one pole of a continuum of states of feeling

mental anguish — sustained dull painful emotion

hurt, suffering — feelings of mental or physical pain

distress, hurt, suffering — psychological suffering; «the death of his wife caused him great distress»

pleasure, pleasance — a fundamental feeling that is hard to define but that people desire to experience; «he was tingling with pleasure»

3. pain — a somatic sensation of acute discomfort; «as the intensity increased the sensation changed from tickle to pain»

pain sensation, painful sensation

somaesthesia, somatesthesia, somatic sensation, somesthesia — the perception of tactual or proprioceptive or gut sensations; «he relied on somesthesia to warn him of pressure changes»

mittelschmerz — pain in the area of the ovary that is felt at the time of ovulation (usually midway through the menstrual cycle)

phantom limb pain — pain felt by an amputee that seems to be located in the missing limb

twinge — a sharp stab of pain

4. pain — a bothersome annoying person; «that kid is a terrible pain»

pain in the neck, nuisance

disagreeable person, unpleasant person — a person who is not pleasant or agreeable

5. pain - something or someone that causes troublepain — something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness; «washing dishes was a nuisance before we got a dish washer»; «a bit of a bother»; «he’s not a friend, he’s an infliction»

pain in the ass, pain in the neck, bother, botheration, infliction, annoyance

negative stimulus — a stimulus with undesirable consequences

nuisance — (law) a broad legal concept including anything that disturbs the reasonable use of your property or endangers life and health or is offensive

irritant, thorn — something that causes irritation and annoyance; «he’s a thorn in my flesh»

plague — an annoyance; «those children are a damn plague»

Verb 1. pain — cause bodily suffering to and make sick or indisposed

ail, trouble

hurt — give trouble or pain to; «This exercise will hurt your back»

recrudesce, break out, erupt — become raw or open; «He broke out in hives»; «My skin breaks out when I eat strawberries»; «Such boils tend to recrudesce»

2. pain - cause emotional anguish or make miserablepain — cause emotional anguish or make miserable; «It pains me to see my children not being taught well in school»

anguish, hurt

discomfit, discompose, untune, upset, disconcert — cause to lose one’s composure

break someone’s heart — cause deep emotional pain and grief to somebody; «The young man broke the girl’s heart when he told her was going to marry her best friend»

agonise, agonize — cause to agonize

try — give pain or trouble to; «I’ve been sorely tried by these students»

excruciate, torment, torture, rack — torment emotionally or mentally

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

pain

noun

2. ache, smarting, stinging, aching, cramp, cramp, throb, throbbing, spasm, pang, twinge, shooting pain I felt a sharp pain in my lower back.

3. sorrow, suffering, torture, distress, despair, grief, misery, agony, sadness, torment, hardship, bitterness, woe, anguish, heartache, affliction, tribulation, desolation, wretchedness Her eyes were filled with pain.

verb

1. distress, worry, hurt, wound, torture, grieve, torment, afflict, sadden, disquiet, vex, agonize, cut to the quick, aggrieve It pains me to think of an animal being in distress.

2. hurt, chafe, cause pain to, cause discomfort to His ankle still pained him.

pain in the neck (Informal) nuisance, pain (informal), bore, drag (informal), bother, headache (informal), pest, irritation, annoyance, aggravation, vexation, pain in the arse or backside (taboo informal) She can be an absolute pain in the neck when she’s in a scatty mood.

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

pain

noun

1. A sensation of physical discomfort occurring as the result of disease or injury:

ache, pang, prick, prickle, smart, soreness, stab, sting, stitch, throe, twinge.

2. A state of physical or mental suffering:

affliction, agony, anguish, distress, hurt, misery, torment, torture, woe, wound, wretchedness.

3. Attentiveness to detail.Used in plural:

4. The use of energy to do something.Used in plural:

5. Informal. One that makes another totally miserable by causing sharp pain and irritation:

verb

1. To cause suffering or painful sorrow to:

2. To have or cause a feeling of physical pain or discomfort:

The American Heritage® Roget’s Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

bolesttrápit

smerteirriterelidelse

kipusärkytuskakärsimys

bolmuka

fájdalomkín

kvelja, valda sársaukasársauki

痛み

고통

dolor

analgetikasbe skausmobeskausmisdėti pastangasįgrisėlis

sāpessāpētsāpinātsmeldze

chindurere

bolečina

smärtapina

ความเจ็บปวด

sự đau đớn

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

pain

[ˈpeɪn]

n

(= penalty) on pain of death → sous peine de mort
on pain of imprisonment → sous peine d’emprisonnement pains

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

pain


pain

:

pain clinic

nSchmerzklinik f


pain

:

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

pain

(pein) noun

hurt or suffering of the body or mind. a pain in the chest.

verb

to cause suffering or upset to (someone). It pained her to admit that she was wrong.

pained adjective

showing or expressing pain. a pained expression.

ˈpainful adjective

causing pain. a painful injury.

ˈpainfully adverbˈpainless adjective

without pain. painless childbirth.

ˈpainlessly adverbˈpainkiller noun

a drug etc which lessens or removes pain.

ˈpainstaking (ˈpeinz-) adjective

going to great trouble and taking great care. a painstaking student.

a pain in the neck

a person who is constantly annoying. People who are always complaining are a pain in the neck.

take pains

to take great trouble and care (to do something). He took great pains to make sure we enjoyed ourselves.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

pain

أَلَمٌ bolest smerte Schmerz πόνος dolor kipu douleur bol dolore 痛み 고통 pijn smerte ból dor боль smärta ความเจ็บปวด ağrı sự đau đớn

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

pain

n. [ache] dolor; [suffering] sufrimiento, pena; [colicky] cólico. V. cuadro en la página 102.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

  • I have a pain here
  • I have a pain in my chest
  • I want an injection for the pain
  • I don’t want an injection for the pain
  • Can you give me something for the pain?

Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

pain

n dolor m; a pain in the back..un dolor en la espalda; back — dolor de espalda; breakthrough — dolor irruptivo; dull — dolor sordo; growing pains dolores de(l) crecimiento; joint — dolor de las articulaciones; labor pains dolores de(l) parto; low back — dolor lumbar, dolor de la espalda baja; nagging — dolor persistente; phantom — dolor fantasma; — reliever, — pill (fam) analgésico (form), calmante m, pastilla para el dolor; sharp — dolor agudo; stabbing — dolor punzante; to be in — tener dolor

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


noun

physical suffering or distress, as due to injury, illness, etc.

a distressing sensation in a particular part of the body: a back pain.

mental or emotional suffering or torment: I am sorry my news causes you such pain.

pains,

  1. laborious or careful efforts; assiduous care: Great pains have been taken to repair the engine perfectly.
  2. the suffering of childbirth.

Informal. an annoying or troublesome person or thing.

verb (used with object)

to cause physical pain to; hurt.

to cause (someone) mental or emotional pain; distress: Your sarcasm pained me.

verb (used without object)

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Idioms about pain

    feel no pain, Informal. to be intoxicated: After all that free beer, we were feeling no pain.

    on / upon / under pain of, liable to the penalty of: on pain of death.

Origin of pain

1250–1300; Middle English peine punishment, torture, pain <Old French <Latin poena penalty, pain <Greek poinḗ penalty

synonym study for pain

1-3. Pain , ache , agony , anguish are terms for sensations causing suffering or torment. Pain and ache usually refer to physical sensations (except heartache ); agony and anguish may be physical or mental. Pain suggests a sudden sharp twinge: a pain in one’s ankle. Ache applies to a continuous pain, whether acute or dull: headache; muscular aches. Agony implies a continuous, excruciating, scarcely endurable pain: in agony from a wound. Anguish suggests not only extreme and long-continued pain, but also a feeling of despair. 4a. See care.

OTHER WORDS FROM pain

un·der·pain, nounun·pain·ing, adjective

Words nearby pain

paillasse, paillette, paillon, pai-loo, Paimio chair, pain, Paine, pained, Painesville, Paine, Thomas, painful

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Words related to pain

ache, agony, burn, cramp, discomfort, fever, illness, injury, irritation, misery, sickness, soreness, spasm, strain, tenderness, torment, trouble, twinge, wound, anguish

How to use pain in a sentence

  • When designing, consider your potential customers’ preferences and pain points.

  • Roughly 80 percent of Americans have back pain at some point in their lives.

  • Patients with myocarditis can experience chest pain, shortness of breath, fatigue or a rapid or irregular heartbeat.

  • So it was the first time that I felt real pain of losing somebody.

  • Those people reported mostly mild side effects, such as headaches, fatigue and muscle pain.

  • He closed his eyes, imagining the virgins, imagining away the pain in his head and groin.

  • Throughout all the stories of loss and pain with the Chief, there was barely a trace of emotion.

  • He not only gives out pain — he is in constant, unrelenting pain.

  • If laughter is the best medicine, The Comeback made you feel enough pain to need a dose—and then it delivered in spades.

  • Just two young kids experiencing the panic, pain, and then the miracle, of new birth.

  • He shrank, as from some one who inflicted pain as a child, unwittingly, to see what the effect would be.

  • She stabbed him, noting the effect upon him with a detached interest that seemed indifferent to his pain.

  • Each sentence came as if torn piecemeal from his unwilling tongue; short, jerky phrases, conceived in pain and delivered in agony.

  • I laved his pain-twisted face with the cool water and let a few drops trickle into his open mouth.

  • Instinctively he tried to hide both pain and anger—it could only increase this distance that was already there.

British Dictionary definitions for pain


noun

the sensation of acute physical hurt or discomfort caused by injury, illness, etc

emotional suffering or mental distress

on pain of subject to the penalty of

Also called: pain in the neck, (taboo) pain in the arse informal a person or thing that is a nuisance

verb (tr)

to cause (a person) distress, hurt, grief, anxiety, etc

informal to annoy; irritate

Word Origin for pain

C13: from Old French peine, from Latin poena punishment, grief, from Greek poinē penalty

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with pain


In addition to the idioms beginning with pain

  • pain in the neck

also see:

  • at pains
  • feel no pain
  • for one’s pains
  • growing pains
  • no pain, no gain
  • on pain of

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

  • Defenition of the word pain

    • An unpleasant, usually localised physical sensation that is often the result of an injury, disease or other ailment.
    • Something which annoys.
    • cause bodily suffering to
    • something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness; «a bit of a bother»
    • cause anguish;, make miserable
    • a symptom of some physical hurt or disorder; «the patient developed severe pain and distension»
    • emotional distress; a fundamental feeling that people try to avoid; «the pain of loneliness»
    • a somatic sensation of acute discomfort; «as the intensity increased the sensation changed from tickle to pain»
    • a bothersome annoying person; «that kid is a terrible pain»
    • something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness; «washing dishes was a nuisance before we got a dish washer»; «a bit of a bother»; «he»s not a friend, he»s an infliction»
    • cause emotional anguish or make miserable; «It pains me to see my children not being taught well in school»
    • a somatic sensation of acute discomfort
    • something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness
    • emotional distress; a fundamental feeling that people try to avoid
    • a bothersome annoying person
    • a symptom of some physical hurt or disorder
    • cause bodily suffering to and make sick or indisposed
    • cause emotional anguish or make miserable

Synonyms for the word pain

    • ache
    • afflict
    • agony
    • ail
    • anguish
    • annoyance
    • bind
    • bother
    • botheration
    • drag
    • grief
    • hurt
    • hurting
    • menace
    • nuisance
    • pain in the ass
    • pain in the neck
    • painful sensation
    • painfulness
    • pest
    • smarting
    • soreness
    • sorrow
    • sting
    • tenderness
    • throbbing
    • torture
    • trouble
    • twinge

Similar words in the pain

    • pain
    • pain’s
    • paine
    • paine’s
    • pained
    • painful
    • painfuller
    • painfullest
    • paining
    • painkiller
    • painkiller’s
    • painkillers
    • painlessly
    • painstaking
    • painstakingly
    • paintbrush
    • paintbrush’s
    • paintbrushes
    • painter
    • painter’s
    • painters
    • paintwork

Hyponyms for the word pain

    • ache
    • aching
    • agonise
    • agonize
    • agony
    • arthralgia
    • break out
    • break someone’s heart
    • burn
    • burning
    • causalgia
    • chest pain
    • chiralgia
    • colic
    • costalgia
    • disagree with
    • distress
    • dysmenorrhea
    • erupt
    • excruciate
    • excruciation
    • glossalgia
    • glossodynia
    • gripes
    • griping
    • growing pains
    • haemorrhoid
    • hemorrhoid
    • hurt
    • intestinal colic
    • irritant
    • keratalgia
    • labor pain
    • mastalgia
    • melagra
    • mental anguish
    • meralgia
    • metralgia
    • mittelschmerz
    • myalgia
    • myodynia
    • nephralgia
    • neuralgia
    • neuralgy
    • nuisance
    • odynophagia
    • orchidalgia
    • pang
    • phantom limb pain
    • photalgia
    • photophobia
    • piles
    • plague
    • pleuralgia
    • pleurodynia
    • podalgia
    • proctalgia
    • rack
    • rawness
    • recrudesce
    • referred pain
    • renal colic
    • smart
    • smarting
    • smartness
    • soreness
    • sting
    • stinging
    • stitch
    • suffering
    • tenderness
    • thermalgesia
    • thorn
    • throb
    • torment
    • torture
    • try
    • twinge
    • ulalgia
    • unpleasantness
    • urodynia

Hypernyms for the word pain

    • disagreeable person
    • discomfit
    • discompose
    • disconcert
    • feeling
    • hurt
    • negative stimulus
    • somaesthesia
    • somatesthesia
    • somatic sensation
    • somesthesia
    • symptom
    • unpleasant person
    • untune
    • upset

Antonyms for the word pain

    • pleasance
    • pleasure

See other words

    • What is galds
    • The definition of mesa
    • The interpretation of the word mensa
    • What is meant by sto
    • The lexical meaning mahlstein
    • The dictionary meaning of the word stein
    • The grammatical meaning of the word leierkasten
    • Meaning of the word zubar
    • Literal and figurative meaning of the word dentiste
    • The origin of the word pano
    • Synonym for the word leib
    • Antonyms for the word brot
    • Homonyms for the word atl
    • Hyponyms for the word aqua
    • Holonyms for the word vatten
    • Hypernyms for the word vesi
    • Proverbs and sayings for the word vanduo
    • Translation of the word in other languages ilma

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