HUF 2-51 Perception of pain Flashcards
Nociception
- Reception of noxious signals
=> Activation of nociceptors (pain receptors) - Nociception w/o pain
Pain
- Subjective perception of unpleasant feeling as a result of nociception
- Complex interplay between signalling systems, modulation from higher centres and unique perception of individual
- Pain w/o nociception
Classification of pain
Duration:
- Acute
- Chronic
Nature - Nociceptive > Somatic > Visceral - Non-nociceptive > Neuropathic > Psychogenic
Properties of nociceptors
- High threshold
- Thermonociceptors: >45 °C
- Mechanonociceptors: >60 g/cm2 - Polymodal (thermo, mechano, chemical…)
- TRPV1
- Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid Type 1
- Transduction of noxious signals in terminals of pain fibres - Free n. endings in skin, vessel walls, CT…
- Sensitized by chemicals as a result of tissue damage
e. g. BK, 5-HT, PG, K+, Histamine (from mast cells, CGRP, SP),
* CGRP, SP dilates BV
Nociceptive primary aff. fibres
- Aδ
- Thin-myelinated (fast)
- Sharp, fast (first) pain - C
- Unmyelinated (slow)
- Slow, delayed (second) pain; chronic pain
Nociceptive aff. and gating in spinal cord
Aδ => Lamina I, V
C => Lamina II
Aβ => Lamina IV (non-noxious fibres; gating of pain)
Gating theory of pain: Aβ activates inhibitory interneuron of projection neuron
∴ Aβ blocked => pain
2° neurons:
- Nociceptive specific
- Wide dynamic range (noxious and non-noxious)
Spinothalamic tract
Decussate in midline of spinal cord
=> Join with those from trigeminal nu. (CN5; face)
=> CL nu., VP nu. of thalamus (process sensory info)
=>
1. Somatosensory cortex (location of pain)
2. Association cortical areas (insular cortex, cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortes)
=> unpleasant feeling and emotional aspects of pain
Spinoreticular tract
Decussate in midline of spinal cord
=> Reticular formation of medulla and pons (additional relay / integration centres)
=> Somatosensory and association cortex
Spino-mesencephalic tract
Terminate in periaqueductal gray matter in midbrain
=> Descending control of pain perception
Projected pain
- Pain which is not originated from nociceptors
- Site that the noxious agent act is not where the pain is sensed
e.g.
1. Direct mechanical stimulation at elbow
=> Discharge from ulnar n.
=> Projected into hand
- Displaced intervertebral disk
=> Compressed fibre impulses
=> Pain projected onto area innervated by spinal n.
Referred pain
- Nociceptive stimulation of viscera produces sensation of pain not in affected organ
- Pain in distinct, superficial part of body
- N. supplying referred region (somatic) and affected organ (viscera) converge onto same spinal neuron
=> Brain learns from experience that signal is more likely from somatic aff.
e.g. Esophagus, heart, urinary/bladder, left ureter, Right prostate
Central control of pain
- Descending system suppressing transmission of pain
# Periaqueductal gray (midbrain) # Locus ceruleus (pons; NA) # Nucleus raphe-magnus (medulla; 5-HT) => Dorsolateral funiculus
- Endogenous opioid peptides (e.g. enkephalin, endorphin, dynorphin)
- Endogenous opioid receptors can be activated by morphine
Pain suppression by opioid peptides
- Presynaptic action
- Block Ca2+ influx into n. terminals - Postsynaptic action
- Open K+ channels
=> Hyperpolarisation (less excitable)
Mimicked by local injection of morphine into spinal cord
e.g. Caesarean section
Management of pain
- Pharmacological
- Non-narcotic analgesic: NSAID, Paracetamol
- Narcotic analgesic: Morphine (+ analogues), which bind opiate receptors of endogenous pain control system
- Psychological drugs: Barbiturates
- Local anaesthetics - Physical
- Heat: activate thermoceptors, ↑ circulation, ↓ metabolic waste
- Cold: ↓ inflammation
- Massage: Aβ
- Electrical stimulation: ↑ descending inhibitory pathway
- Neurosurgery: interruption of ascending pain pathway - Psychological methods
- Cognitive behavioural therapy
- Biofeedback
- Relaxation
- Imagery
- Hypnosis