Evidence

Evidence Page #


This page collects a broad range of evidence about chronic pain, and how it can be resolved. It includes scientific papers but also individual case studies from real people.

Pain resolution is possible without drugs or surgery #

Different non-physical therapies can permanently relieve pain #

  • People with chronic back pain (median ~10 years) experienced major reduction from education and sensory recalibration practices (5/10 pain to 0.5/10). Treatment took 4 weeks of treatment and effects persisted after the 1 year follow up. (Ashar et al. 2021)

  • Psychophysiologic symptom relief therapy (PSRT) similarly shown to eliminate chronic pain in 64% of the participants in a pilot RCT at Harvard Medical School (Donnino et al., 2021)

  • Showing amputees a mirrored image of their limb reduces their phantom limb pain in many cases. (Moseley 2006, Finn et al. 2017)

Notable Individual Cases #

Many of these cases refer specifically to the work of Dr John Sarno, a surgeon at NYU who popularized the idea that many forms of chronic pain were not due to structural damage in the body. What follows are the accounts of many individuals whose pain was resolved through altering their understanding of pain.

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From the founder of Stripe

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From founder/programmer Aaron Iba

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From noted CSS developer Josh Comeau

Pain is not damage #

Many People Have Damage Without Pain #

  • In a landmark 1994 study of 98 pain-free people, over half had spinal disk abnormalities, showing that structural issues often exist without causing pain. (Jensen et al., 1994)
  • 96% of pain-free young athletes showed spinal abnormalities including disc degeneration and arthropathy in detailed imaging. (Rajaswaran et al., 2014)
  • 57% of pain-free adults aged 20-50 had cartilage defects in their hips, demonstrating that structural changes don’t necessarily cause pain. (Tresch et al., 2016)
  • 23% of people without any shoulder pain had complete rotator cuff tears visible on imaging. (Tempelhof et al., 1999)

Many People Have Pain Without Damage #

  • About 80% of amputees experience phantom limb pain, feeling intense pain in limbs that no longer exist, years after tissue has fully healed. (Limakatso et al. 2019)
  • Over 550 million people worldwide experience lower back pain that cannot be explained by any structural abnormality or disease. (World Health Organization)
  • Conditions like fibromyalgia demonstrate how chronic pain can exist without identifiable tissue damage. (Clauw, 2014)

A note on interpreting evidence #

As many have noted, scientific studies take care to interpret. Many studies do not replicate. Indeed, the studies here are suggestive but not conclusive. Yet we still have to decide what to do about our condition. What do we do in light of this?

I suggest that, when the issue is your own health (rather than population-level guidelines), you will benefit from taking a different lens than the maximally skeptical scientist.

Rather than asking, “must I believe this?” and then discarding everything underneath that bar, I suggest a more helpful perspective is “could this be helpful?” — then collecting different interventions and prioritizing them based on their cost.

When we ask “could this be helpful?”, we can use anecdotes and informal reviews as evidence to form hypotheses. Then we can try the lowest-cost and highest-return experiments and see what empirically works in our own situations.

Helpful additional resources for pain resolution #

There are dozens of books on the topic of pain resolution. Having heard from both clients, friends, and strangers, here are the books that others have Having read many of them, those that others have found the most helpful are:

Of course, if you haven’t already, I would recommend also looking at the other resources on this site: Pain Debugging Protocol and especially the Pain Debugging Protocol. It provides a larger structure to understand how many of the other interventions fit into the resolution of pain.

Got anything you’d like to add? You can submit a PR at our Github Repo, or email me at maxkshen[at]gmail.