Chapter 3 Taxonomy: Definition of Pain Terms and and Chronic Pain Syndromes Flashcards
Acute Pain
Pain resulting from nociceptor activation due to damage to tissues. Acute pain typically resolves once the tissue damage is repaired.
Analgesia
Absence of pain in response to a stimulus that is normally painful
Anesthesia
Absence of all sensory modalities.
Anesthesia dolorosa
Pain in an area or region that is anesthetic.
Carpal tunnel syndrome
Pain in the hand, usually occurring at night, due to entrapment of the median nerve in the carpal tunnel. The quality of the pain is a pins-and-needles sensation, stinging, burning, or aching.
There may be decreased sensation on the tips of
the first to third fingers, positive Tinel’s sign, and,
rarely, atrophy of the thenar muscles.
Central pain
Regional pain caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the central nervous system,
usually associated with abnormal sensibility to temperature and to noxious stimulation.
Chronic pain
Pain that persists beyond the course
of an acute disease or a reasonable time for an injury to heal or that is associated with a chronic pathologic process that causes continuous pain or the pain recurs at intervals of months or years. Some investigators use duration of >/ = 6 months to designate pain as chronic.
Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)
A term describing a variety of painful conditions following injury that appear regionally, having a distal predominance of abnormal findings, exceeding in both magnitude and duration the expected clinical course of the inciting event, often resulting in significant impairment of motor function, and showing variable progression
over time. CRPS is a term for disorders previously
called reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD).
CRPS type I (RSD)
- Type I is a syndrome that develops after an initiating noxious event.
- Spontaneous pain or allodynia/hyperalgesia
occurs, which is not limited to the territory of a
single peripheral nerve, and is disproportionate
to the inciting event. - There is or has been evidence of edema, skin
blood flow abnormality, or abnormal sudomotor
activity in the region of the pain since the inciting
event. - This diagnosis is excluded by the existence of
conditions that would otherwise account for the
degree of pain and dysfunction.
CRPS type II (causalgia)
- Type II is a syndrome that develops after a
nerve injury. Spontaneous pain or allodynia/
hyperalgesia occurs, and is not necessarily
limited to the territory of the injured nerve. - There is or has been evidence of edema, skin
blood flow abnormality, or abnormal sudomotor
activity in the region of the pain since the inciting
event. - This diagnosis is excluded by the existence of
conditions that would otherwise account for the
degree of pain and dysfunction.
Cubital tunnel syndrome
Entrapment of the ulnar nerve in a fibro-osseous tunnel formed by the trochlear groove between the olecranon process and the medial epicondyle of the humerus. A myofascial covering converts the groove to a tunnel, which causes the nerve
entrapment. There is pain, numbness, and paresthesia in the distribution of the ulnar nerve and, sometimes, weakness and atrophy in the same distribution. Tinel’s sign is positive at the elbow
Deafferentation pain
Pain due to loss of sensory input into the central nervous system. This may occur with lesions of peripheral nerves such as avulsion of the brachial plexus or due to pathology of the central nervous system.
Dysesthesia
An unpleasant abnormal evoked sensation,
whether spontaneous or evoked.
Fibromyalgia
Diffuse musculoskeletal aching and
pain with multiple predictable tender points. There is
pain on digital palpation in at least 11 of 18 tender sites
Tender sites of Fibromylagia
Occiput: bilateral, at the suboccipital muscle
insertions.
Low cervical: bilateral, at the anterior aspects of
the intertransverse process at C5–C7.
Trapezius: bilateral, at the midpoint of the upper
border.
Supraspinatus: bilateral, at the origins above the
scapula spine near the medial border.
Second rib: bilateral, at the second costochondral
junctions, just lateral to the junctions on upper
surfaces.
Lateral epicondyle: bilateral, 2 cm distal to the
epicondyles.
Gluteal: bilateral, in the upper outer quadrants
of the buttocks in the anterior fold of muscle.
Greater trochanter: bilateral, posterior to the
trochanteric prominence.
Knees: bilateral, at the medial fat pad proximal to
the joint line.
Hyperalgesia
An increased response to a stimulus
that is normally painful.
Hyperalgesia is severe pain in response to mild noxious stimuli, such as a pinprick.
Hyperesthesia
Hyperalgesia
Allodynia
Increased sensitivity to stimulation; this excludes the special senses.
Hyperesthesia is a sensation out of proportion
to the stimuli applied.
Hyperesthesia is further divided into hyperalgesia and allodynia.
Allodynia is the sensation of pain in response to
a non-noxious stimuli (e.g., light touch, fabric on skin).
Allodynia is a physical examination finding in many neuropathic pain states and its distribution, frequently nondermatomal
Hyperpathia
A painful syndrome, characterized by
increased reaction to a stimulus, especially a repetitive stimulus, as well as increased threshold.
Hypoalgesia
Diminished sensitivity to noxious
stimulation.
Hypoesthesia
Diminished sensitivity to stimulation;
this excludes the special senses.