The Essence of Pain

Pain
is simultaneously a consuming, blinding reality and a complex and slippery object of study. This section aims to capture the essence of pain--what precisely it is, how it is generated and what purpose it serves. Two influential contributors round out the section. Ronald Dubner, professor and chairman of biomedical sciences at the University of Maryland Dental School, offers on page 12 his call to arms on what the research community must do to translate basic research advances into much-needed new therapies. And David B. Morris, an English professor at the University of Virginia, on page 14, explores the roles of culture, context, and experience to form a central part of the pain experience. Lest this appear a purely academic exercise, on page 17 we present the story of a woman whose life has been reshaped by chronic pain.

We are now halfway through the Decade of Pain Control and Relief. How far have we come?
By Brendan A. Maher
and Richard Gallagher
How do you study that which words fail to describe?
By Ricki Lewis
Timeline:
A History of Analgesia and Anesthesia
Life without Pain
The child's parents first realized something was wrong when their 4-month-old developed severe teething sores.
Animal Models of Pain
Non-human animals are good -- but hardly perfect -- models for pain research.
Rather than a single pain treatment, effective relief may require an arsenal, says a world-renowned pain researcher.
By Ronald Dubner
An understanding of pain, bereft of its cultural dimensions, is woefully incomplete
By David B. Morris
How a chronic syndrome altered a life and shaped a mission
By Laura M. Hrastar
Image © Bettmann/CORBIS
A Man's Head Based on a detail of An Allegory with Venus and Cupid by Bronzino