Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Researchers are developing a 'vocabulary of pain'
27 July 2011 [18:08] - Today.Az
All over the world, patients with chronic pain struggle to express how they feel to the doctors and health-care providers who are trying to understand and treat them.
Now, a University at Buffalo psychiatrist is attempting to help
patients suffering from chronic pain and their doctors by drawing on
ontology, the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of being or
existence.
The research will be discussed during a tutorial he will give at the
International Conference on Biomedical Ontology, sponsored by UB, that
will be held in Buffalo July 26-30.
"Pain research is very difficult because nothing allows the physician
to see the patient's pain directly," says Werner Ceusters, MD,
professor of psychiatry in UB's School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, and principal investigator on a new National Institutes of
Health grant, An Ontology for Pain and Related Disability, Mental Health
and Quality of Life.
"The patient has to describe what he or she is feeling."
That is a serious shortcoming, Ceusters says, because each patient's
subjective experience of pain is different. Descriptions of pain
therefore lack the precision and specificity that is taken for granted
with other disorders, where biomarkers or physiological indicators
reveal what health-care providers need in order to assess the severity
of a particular disorder.
"If we want to more effectively help people suffering from chronic
pain, we need to study a population that is consistent, patients who
have features in common," Ceusters says. "The problem with pain is, it's
very hard to build up a group with the same sort of pain. People don't
have the same vocabulary or linguistic capabilities or even the same
cultural backgrounds. It's something pain researchers have struggled
with for decades," Ceusters says. "We need to develop a vocabulary of
pain."
That's where ontology comes in.
"The philosophical definition of ontology is the study of things that
exist and how they relate to each other," says Ceusters, who also is
director of the Ontology Research Group of UB's New York State Center of
Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences. "I am a person and you
are a person so we share something. Suppose I drop dead. What lies on
the floor? Is that still a person? If it is no longer a person, is it
still the very same thing that was sitting here as a person but now is a
corpse?"
Ceusters says that in much the same way, definitions of pain and
especially of chronic pain need to be much more precise; ontology
provides methods of distinguishing among categories and describing data
in uniform and formal ways.
While the philosophical approach to ontology naturally has its roots
in ancient Greece, a computational approach to ontology began in the
latter part of the 20th century, when computer scientists interested in
artificial intelligence wanted to create software programs that perform
reasoning they way humans do. To do so, they began to draw on ontology.
"Here at the University at Buffalo, we excel at combining the two
approaches; we have a very strong foundation in the philosophical
approach to ontology with Barry Smith, who is a pioneer in contemporary
ontology, especially related to biomedical applications," says Ceusters,
"while we also have a very strong presence in computational approaches,
especially to biomedical ontology. These computational approaches allow
us to devise systems of communication in which there is a consistent
meaning for terms used in different language systems and conceptual
frameworks."
With the $793,571 NIH grant, Ceusters and colleagues will study data
gathered from thousands of patients in the U.S., the United Kingdom,
Sweden, Israel and Germany who suffer from oral and facial pain,
including temporomandibular disorder (TMD).
Ceusters will work with his colleagues, including Richard Ohrbach,
DDS, PhD, associate professor of oral diagnostic sciences in the UB
School of Dental Medicine, to develop an ontology that allows the data
to be described in a much more uniform way.
"The goal is to integrate the data together so that we have a large
pool of data that will allow us to obtain better insight into the
complexity of pain disorders, specifically the assessment of pain
disorders and how they impact mental health and a patients' quality of
life," Ceusters says.
The grant will build on past work that Ceusters conducted with a
grant from the Oishei Foundation related to improving the
classification, diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric conditions.
Ceusters, who has degrees in knowledge engineering and information
science as well as in neuropsychiatry, says that the current effort grew
out of his work on that grant and also from a meeting with pain
researchers that he attended in 2009.
"At that meeting, we discussed how we might build an ontology so that
it could represent what pain is and how it relates to body parts and
their activities and functions," he says. "Our goal is to create a
software program that will allow all pain specialists to express
themselves in crystal clear terms," he says, "We will create a symptom
checklist that can be understood by computers. We have to define the
terminology of pain. This can only be solved by the kind of ontology we
are doing here at the University at Buffalo." /Science Daily/
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