7. Nervous system Flashcards

1
Q

Role of nervous system?

A

= processing information, conducting messages, controlling the movement of muscles and storing our memories

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2
Q

Define pain?

A

= an unpleasant feeling that is conveyed to the brain by sensory neurons

  • involves integration of stimulation of nociceptors, bare sensory nerve endings and input from higher brain centres, emotions and activities do modify the pain experience
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3
Q

Compare Acute and chronic pain

A

acute = Rapid onset, well localised, responds to analgesics

Chronic

  • slowly developing continuous or recurring pain
  • difficult to treat as is learned response
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4
Q

What are the different types of pain (5)?

A

Somatogenic = due to recognisable physical cause

psychogenic = no obvious physical cause e.g. IBS

visceral = poorly localised pain from organs in thoracic and abdominal cavity

somatic = well localised pain from skin, muscles or joints and responds to analgesics

referred = visceral pain which is perceived as somatic pain in an area with the same innervation

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5
Q

why might neuropathic pain develop in an amputee in the affected limb?

A
  • Pain is attributed to nerve remodelling where the sodium channels are more easily activated or are leaky
  • The thalamus and cortical structures are also likely to be involved and the perception of pain is the affected limb may be related to changes in brain and not the periphery
  • Changes in the spinal cord are also implicated were changes in the responsiveness of NMDA glutamate channels occur
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6
Q

Pathophysiology of

Motor neurone disease

A
  • Is associated with the degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons ‘
  • Axons of the affected nerve degenerate leading to muscle wasting which begins as weakness and progresses to fatal paralysis
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7
Q

Pathophysiology of:

parkinson’s disease

A
  • Degeneration of dopamine neurons

- This leads to observable changes in the structure and function of the brain and spinal cord

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8
Q

Pathophysiology of:

Huntington’s disease

A
  • Is an autosomal dominant genetic disorder that results in loss of neurons in the basal nuclei causing a decrease in activity of the inhibitory neurotransmitter GABA
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9
Q

Pathophysiology of:

Multiple sclerosis

A
  • Is an autoimmune disorder whereby immune cells destroy CNS myelin leading to plaque formation and causing impairments in motor, sensory and neurological function.
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10
Q

Pathophysiology of:

Spinal cord injury

A

Consists of primary and secondary phase of injury

  • Primary phase the injury to the spine directly exerts force to the spinal cord disrupting axons, blood vessels and cell membranes
    - Neurological deficits are present immediately
  • Secondary phase leads to tissue destruction and involves inflammation, oedema, vascular dysfunction ischaemia, excitotoxicity and delayed apoptotic cell death
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11
Q

Pathophysiology of:

Traumatic brain injury

A
  • Primary head injury results immediately from the trauma e.g. contusion
  • Secondary head injury occurs from processes initiated by the trauma
    o Occurs days to weeks after the injury and plays a major role in the brain injury and death of a patient following a TBI
    o May bee from ischemia, increased ICP, cerebral oedema
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12
Q

Pathophysiology of Ischemic stroke

A
  • Blood vessel becomes narrowed and a blood clot forms causing a blockage
  • The blockage starves the brain of oxygen
  • Can be thrombotic or embolic
  • Thrombotic – results when thrombus blocks the blood vessel and deprives the brain tissue of oxygen and nutrient rich blood
  • Embolic stroke occurs when fragments from a thrombus that has formed in the blood vessels everywhere in the body, travels to the blood vessels in the brain and causes a blockage
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13
Q

Pathophysiology of haemorrhagic stroke

A
  • Blood vessels ruptures in the brain causing permeant damage (may be due to an aneurysm or hypertension)
  • Results from bleeding in the brain
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