Blue Devil of the Week: Understanding Chronic Pain in Women
Lindsie Boerger studies how to help patients with fibromyalgia
![Lindsie Boerger is assisting a study that examines how chronic pain and opioid medication use affects the spine, brain, and decision making. Photo by Jonathan Black.](/sites/default/files/legacy-files/styles/story_hero/public/Lindsie%20HERO.jpg?itok=W1OwcRfQ)
Name: Lindsie Boerger
Position: Clinical Research Specialist, Duke Anesthesiology
Time at Duke: 6 months
What she does at Duke: Lindsie Boerger works with Katherine Martucci, assistant professor in anesthesiology at Duke, on a study to better understand fibromyalgia, a disorder that causes pain in the muscles and bones, fatigue, and trouble sleeping.
examines how chronic pain and opioid medication use affects the spine, brain, and decision making and whether rewards have a positive influence on the individual鈥檚 condition.
鈥淚鈥檓 inspired by how we鈥檙e impacting people鈥檚 lives,鈥 Boerger said. 鈥淚t makes me excited to get to work every day and meet our patients.鈥
Boerger spends four to five hours with patients when they come to Duke for the study, which involves capturing MRI images of a participant鈥檚 brain and spine as they relax and play a video game. When it comes time to analyze these images, Boerger and her lab hope to better understand how the reward and value systems are altered in chronic pain and to find how changes in reward and value systems may influence the chronic pain experience.
During the MRI, Boerger keeps the conversation going by talking to participants about their families, interests and her 6-year-old daughter, Emelia.
鈥淥ur study visits are long, but it鈥檚 my job to make sure the patients are comfortable the entire time,鈥 Boerger said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about communicating. I鈥檓 genuinely interested in their lives. Talking puts them at ease.鈥
What she loves about Duke: Being relatively new to Duke, Boerger appreciates the helpful and kind nature of colleagues. She pointed out the generosity of staff and faculty at the Duke Brain Imaging and Analysis Center, a conglomerate of researchers studying the brain, where Boerger meets with patients for the study.
鈥淭he employees all go out of their way to help,鈥 Boerger said. 鈥淥ne time, a technician spent 20 minutes helping me with a technical issue so I could continue the visit with my patient. They could have easily canceled our scan time. Instead, they made sure to keep a conversation going with my patient and to make sure they were comfortable in the scanner as we fixed the issue.鈥
Memorable day: Over the summer, Boerger got to know other clinical research members in Anesthesiology at a department retreat. The day included time for Boerger and her co-workers to play a competitive game of Jeopardy.
鈥淲e competed to see who knew the most about HIPAA compliance and other research related topics,鈥 Boerger said. 鈥淲e were dominating the other team then lost it all in final jeopardy when we couldn鈥檛 recite Anesthesiology鈥檚 mission statement. It was a dramatic ending.鈥
Meaningful object: Todd Harshbarger, instructor at the Center for Brain Imaging and Analysis, took an MRI scan of Boerger鈥檚 brain and made a model of it using a 3D printer. The bright orange replica sits on Boerger鈥檚 desk.
鈥淚 was really intrigued by the technology,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檇 never seen a 3D printer in use before. It鈥檚 quite a fun conversation starter when people walk by my desk.鈥
Best advice received: Boerger says it鈥檚 what she tells herself: persevere. She earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in global health while working two part-time jobs as a barista and dental assistant 鈥 all while raising her daughter.
鈥淵ou can always do more than you think you can and adding a positive attitude certaintly helps,鈥 she said.
First job: Boerger spent most of her free time in high school at Starbucks. When it came time to getting a part-time job at 16, she successfully applied to be a barista at a location in Columbus, Ohio.
鈥淚鈥檓 a coffee lover, so that was the best moment of my life at the time,鈥 Boerger said.
Something most people don鈥檛 know about her: Boerger loves adrenaline. She owned a motorcycle and has ridden snowboards and skateboards since 13.
鈥淚 love to do crazy stuff like big jumps and go on rails,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 lucky. I鈥檝e only broken my wrist once.鈥
Is there a colleague at Duke who has an intriguing job or goes above and beyond to make a difference? Nominate that person for Blue Devil of the Week.