Adjunct therapy for pain Flashcards
What is chronic orofacial pain?
Pain with confusing mechanisms, multifactorial due to subjective nature of pain
Can be due to teeth, gums, sinuses, TMJ, jaw and neurological problems
E.g. Post-hepatic neuralgia, where after VSV infection get trigeminal nerve pain
What are the categories of drugs used as adjunctive therapeutic agents?
Antianxiety/muscle relaxant
Antidepressants
Anticonvulsants
Others
What are antianxiety/muscle relaxants?
Benzodiazepines, sedatives and anxiolytics without causing analgesia
What is one antidepressant drug?
Amitriptyline, from class of tricyclic antidepressants
What does amitriptyline do?
Increase CNS serotonin and norepinephrine levels by blocking serotonin transporters (5HTT) and norepinephrine transporters (NET) at the pre-synaptic membrane
These transporters normally take up NE and serotonin to reduce synaptic presence
Adverse effects of amitriptyline?
Tachycardia, postural hypotension, cardiac arrhythmia (can be fatal with overdose)
Dry mouth, blurring of vision, constipation and urinary retention
Sedation
What are serotonin and NE used for in pain modulation?
Neurotransmitters for interneurons which moderate pain pathways, reducing pain by releasing inhibitory signals
Together with enkephalin
What are anticonvulsants/mood stabilizers?
Phenytoin, carbamazepine
Increases CNS GABA, decreasing neuronal excitability by inhibiting sodium channels