Analgesia Flashcards
1
Q
Pain Pathway
1: Transduction
A
- Beginning of the pain pathway, the exposure to a noxious stimulus is transformed by nociceptors (pain receptors) into an electrical signal (action potential)
2
Q
Pain Pathway
2: Transmission
A
- Once action potential is generated, the peripheral nerve fibres conduct the electrical impulses to the spinal cord
3
Q
Pain Pathway
3: Modulation
A
- Arriving at the spinal cord where the peripheral nerves terminate, the electrical impulse is further altered by neutrons which may amplify or suppress the signal
4
Q
Pain Pathway
4: Perception
A
- Once modified the electrical impluse is transmitted to the brain to be processed and recognised as pain
5
Q
Receptors and Drugs
A
- Different receptors are involved with each stage of the pain pathway, therefore different analgesics can target certain receptors
6
Q
Physiological Pain
A
- Sensation of pain when there is the possibility of, or actual tissue injury
- Classified as adaptive pain as it promotes survival through injury prevention and promotion of healing to injured tissue
7
Q
Pathological Pain
A
- Triggered by a malfunction or damage to the nervous system
- Typically develops from a noxious stimulus that activates peripheral neural receptors, however the pain extends beyond the actual duration of the stimulus
- Can be difficult to treat as it’s maladaptive pain (serves no protective function to the patient and causes further suffering)
8
Q
Inflammatory Pain
A
- When inflammatory mediators (prostaglandins and histamine) are released at the site of tissue injury, this is the type of pain that ensues
- Develops due to the alteration of the chemical environment around nociceptors, causing changes to their sensitivity and action potential threshold
- This pain usually resolves with healing of the injury as the inflammation and the presence of chemical mediators resides
9
Q
Neuropathic Pain
A
- Experiences when there is damage to the nervous system itself (i.e nerve damage)
- Injury to nerves results in multiple changes that can contribute to chronic neuropathic pain and hypersensitivity and allodynia (a normally non-painful stimuli feeling painful)
10
Q
Idiopathic Pain
A
- Pain where there is no identifiable cause
- Should be treated as real and significant
11
Q
Acute Pain
A
- Onset immediately after tissue injury and dissipates at the resolution of injury
12
Q
Chronic Pain
A
- Much longer in duration
- Can be difficult to treat as can persist during/after healing
13
Q
Physiological Signs of Pain
A
- Increased HR, RR, BP and temp
- Salivation
- Dilated pupils
- Peripheral vasoconstriction (Pale MM)
- Changes to respiratory effort and pattern
14
Q
Behavioural Signs of Pain
A
- Abnormal posture or gait
- Restlessness/agitation
- Vocalisation
- Depression
- Inappetence
- Aggression or timidity (changes in normal behaviour)
- Resentment of handling
- Grooming changes
- Reluctance to lie down/sleep
15
Q
Types of Analgesia: Opioids
A
- Block or depress pain signals
- Decrease the release of excitatory neurotransmitters as well as acting at the post-synaptic sites
- Analgesic of choice for moderate to severe pain