MoxieGirl
CH.com Junior

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Posts: 91
Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
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Hi Everyone, and thank you for filling in the survey, it is getting some good response.
Below is a post I put up on our sister board about this very topic of clusters being the 'worst' pain known to man. And I think, in this regard, I have to agree with AussieBrian.
There has also been talk on the other board about the 1-10 pain scale for clusters being like the 1-10 Richter Scale, where 2 is 10 times more powerful than 1, and 3 is 10 times more powerful than 2, etc. And although I agree that this is how it feels, that is a challenging concept to get across to most people.
Back to the survey I've posted. I'm asking for this input because it will play a part in a bigger project I'm working on, which I will publish here when it is done. I'm hoping clusterheads will find it useful.
So, here's the post I put up on the sister board about this topic.
Something I've also been thinking about when comparing other pain to clusters. When I read about clusters, it is usually said that they are the 'worst pain known to man', or the 'worst pain known to medical science'.
Interesting this word 'worst'. Perhaps it is just a way of saying 'most painful', without having the word 'pain' show up twice in a sentence 'most painful pain known to man' - reads a bit weird.
But also, maybe worst includes things beyond just how painful it is.
Compare it with a broken bone. I'm 40 something, and have never had one. (knocks on wood) But I have friends who have, and it hurts! But it is a rare thing, happening possibly a few times in most people's life (not taking into account people like Evil Knievel).
So how does that compare with a cluster attack? If I had one or two cluster attacks in my entire life, it may score more or less the same as a broken bone. If I got 150 broken bones a year, they might score closer to cluster headache.
I think there is an unavoidable fault when trying to compare clusters with another pain on an equal footing. That equal footing doesn't exist. Can't exist. For most comparisons, I hasten to add. Trigeminal Neuralgia might be an exception.
Some of the things I think make a cluster attack 'worse' than other pains is the complete randomness of it. Its resistance to most traditional medicines. How long it last for, for those of you that have it lasting 1-3 hours. The side affects, PTSD, fear, anxiety, lack of sleep, regularity of it (random regularity, if there is such a thing). And also the utter lack of understanding of it amongst the medical community.
For example, one thing that would reduce the 'worst' factor of clusters is if every doctor knew how to diagnose it quickly, and how to best treat it. Even taken psilocybin and LSD out of the equation, if doctors knew to give oxygen and injections to a patient on their first visit, that alone would reduce the 'worst' rating. Because instead of going years without being diagnosed, or wrongly diagnosed, people would have tools at their disposal to deal with the condition.
MG
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