Lecture 12 - No Pain, No Gain - What is pain? Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the purpose of pain?

A
  • It is a biological function of stopping and/or reducing further injury (e.g. congenital analgesia)
  • Promotes learning to avoid future injury - pain makes you think, remember and prevent
  • sets the limits on activity forcing rest and allowing for recuperation and recovery
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2
Q

What are the types of pain

A

TRANSIENT - pain of brief duration having little consequence and rarely producing more than fleeting attention e.g. aches and pains you get during the day go away -> no tissue damage

ACUTE - combination of tissue damage, pain and anxiety which resolves after the damaged tissues have healed (less than 6 months) e.g. tissue damage could be minor [paper cut] or major [fracture]; once the tissue heals, pain goes away

CHRONIC - pain which persists after all possible healing has occurred (more than 6 months). e.g no injury to heal > 6months can impact working life, social life and relationships

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3
Q

What is Chronic pain

A
  • persists long after pain can serve any useful function
  • no longer a symptom of injury or disease
  • becomes a syndrome and a medical problem requiring urgent attention
  • the pain becomes an intolerable evil that serves no useful function
  • patients feel helpless and hopeless
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4
Q

What are the 3 multidimensional experience of pain

A

SENSORY-DISCRIMINATIVE - intensity, duration, quality and location of a nociceptive (code for intensity) stimulus.

MOTIVATIONAL-AFFECTIVE - aversive, emotional and automatic responses; the drive to reduce pain

COGNITIVE-EVALUATIVE - learning, memory, attention-mechanisms

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5
Q

What is multidimensional experience of pain

A
  • pain is a subjective experience affected by more than the extent of injury or organic dysfunction
  • many factors are involved in the etiology, severity, exacerbation and maintenance of pain, suffering and disability
  • people’s experience of pain and responses to pain are influenced by: life stresses, perception, social support, emotions, expectations, cultural background, financial resources etc
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6
Q

What are factors contribute to pain

A
  • Physiological factors - CNS/Neural processing

- Psychological factors - cognitions, expectations, beliefs

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7
Q

According to the WHO 1998 how many people reported pain most of the time for 6 months or more during the year

A

21.5%

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8
Q

What are some common pain conditions

A

LOW BACK PAIN - 65-80% of all people have back pain at some time in their life. Back pain is the most frequent cause of activity limitation in people younger than 45 yrs old

ARTHRITIS PAIN - 2002/03 NZ health survey. 13.9% of men, 17.3% of women reported arthritis

HEADACHE - 45mil Americans have chronic, severe, disabling headaches. More than $4billion spent each yr on over the counter pain medications

OTHER PAIN DISORDERS - such as the neuralgias and neuropathies (Affect nerves throughout the body)

  • pain due to damage to the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord)
  • pain of unknown origin where no physical cause can be found
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9
Q

What are the two pain phenomenons

A

PHANTOM LIMB PAIN - pain away from part of body you don’t have -> nerve sends signal when it shouldn’t

COMPLEX REGIONAL PAIN SYNDROME - show condition in extremities so limbs show inflammation (fluid) could lead to skin drying and could turn red, so accumulation of chemicals and temperatures difference and fluid in joints.

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10
Q

What is the role of the CNS in pain

A
  • the variability of pain experiences is indicative of numerous neural mechanisms that modulate our sensory experiences
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11
Q

What is gate control theory

A
  • Describes how a complex arrangement of neurons in the signal cord blocks certain pain signals and allow others to pass through to the brain which lead to the perception of pain
  • helps to explain phantom and chronic pain and is widely recognised
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12
Q

What is the biopsychological theory of pain

A
  • Physiological and psychological factors contribute to the production, modulation, maintenance and experience of pain.
  • a relationship exists between psychological and physical changes and pain:
    > mental events (thoughts, memories, memories) influence physical changes which influence pain
    > psychological states (stress, depression, anxiety) and physical changes (automatic arousal, muscle tension) influence pain
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