Lecture 3: Pain anatomy and physiology Flashcards
What was Descartes view of pain?
- Thread between the foot and the brain that allows you to pull your foot away when you feel it burning.
- Not exactly the case, but he is right that there is a pathway between the foot and the brain
What are the pain-relevant loci? (for pain below neck because pain above neck isn’t the same pathway)
- skin/muscles/joints: places outside the NS where pain can start, “periphery”
- Dorsal horn of the spinal cord
- Dorsal root ganglion: part of the nervous system, outside of the spinal cord
- brain
What are viscera?
- organs that can feel pain
- some can only feel certain pain
Where does sensory and motor stuff happen?
- sensory stuff happens dorsal
- motor stuff happens ventral
What are the two pathways of pain?
- ascending pathways, also called “pain matrix”: goes from the periphery to the brain
- descending pathways: not motor, modulated pain that goes from the brain to the periphery
What parts of the brain are involved in each pathway?
Ascending: tslp
Descending: hmbs H n M Baby Section
- ascending: thalamus, somatosensory cortex, limbic cortex, prefrontal cortex.
- descending: hypothalamus, midbrain, brainstem, spinal cord.
How is the skin roughly constituted (skin anatomy)?
- epidermis: top layer
- dermis: inner layer, has lots of skin in it
What is the dermis composed of?
Different nerve endings:
- Meissner’s corpuscle, for touch.
- Pacinian corpuscle, for vibration
- Free nerve ending, very important for pain
- Schwann cells, also important for pain
What important nerve endings is hairy skin composed of?
- Merkel’s disk, for touch.
- Ruffini terminals, for stretch.
What is a nociceptor?
- Free nerve ending
- Specialised for response to pain
- unipolar neuron
- very long and very fragile cells
- distribute the pain in a glove-stocking style because long nociceptors will break first.
How are unipolar neurons constructed?
- axon with cell body off to side, dendrites at one end of axon
- most of the body’s sensory neurons
- they collect information from energies in the environment.
Why do some pain syndromes show a glove-and-stocking distribution?
Nociceptors in the foot or hand are the longest and are most likely to be damage. So the pain starts there and moves up gradually.
What does afferent (fiber) mean?
- Sending sensory information up
- smaller ones
What do efferent fibers do ?
- Send motor information down
- bigger ones
What are the different types of afferent fibers ?
- proprioception: muscle control, Aalpha, 80-120 m/s
- touch, vibration: Abeta, 35-75m/s
- thermal, pain: Adelta, 5-35 m/s
- pain, sweating: C, 0.5-2 m/s, slower because of lack of myelination and small diameter
What afferent fibers is responsible for first and second pain?
- Ad fibers, because transmission of info is very quick
- C fibers are responsible for second pain, which is why there is a delay cause information processing to the brain is very slow
How are nociceptors organised ?
-Packed together in bundles called nerves (axons packaged together)
What happens when you get pocked by a needle?
This will activate 1 maybe several nociceptors.
What is shingles?
- Viral infection that causes painful rash
- Dermatomal specific pain
What happens when you have pain on the left hand?
- Information crosses in the brain
- The pain will be integrated on the right side of the brain and vice versa
How is the CNS protected?
- Shielded by bone
- There are holes in the vertebral column that allow spinal nerves to come in and out.
What are the different spinal divisions?
- cervical: close to brain
- thoracic: upper back
- lumbar lower back
- sacral: pelvic area
How does the spinal ganglion influence the physiology of the spinal cord?
-Makes dorsal root (afferent) thicker than ventral, because it needs room for cell bodies.
What is the dorsal root ganglia?
- Mixed spinal nerve with efferents and afferents
- It is close to spinal nerve but not in spinal nerve
What is the “white matter” and why is it white?
- They are axons
- It is white because the axons are myelinated.
What is the grey matter ?
- They are cell bodies
- The ventral ones are larger than the dorsal ones because they are efferent muscle fibers
How is the grey matter divided?
- divided into 10 laminae according to shape, size and type of neuron that pass by each lamina
- 1 and 2: superficial pain
- 3 and 4: touch
- 5: deep lamina
What are the dorsolateral fasciculus?
- fibers that are entering the dorsal part from outside
- some come from primary afferents
- some come from the brain
- anything that enters the spinal cord enters here
What is the substantia gelatinosa?
- Not very dense
- Corresponds to lamina 1 and 2
What are the two scenarios for information processing in the spinal cord?
Two scenarios:
- either it just goes through, or
- it can synapse (through an interneuron) in the subsantia gelatinosa to a second-order neurons (projection neuron).
What are the two types of C fibers?
- peptidergic: contains peptides, small protein neurotransmitter, go to lamina 1.
- IB4+: contains electin, not involved in the physiology, goes to lamina 2.
How did they decide on modern molecular definition of sensory neurons?
- They started by isolating 800 spinal cord cells
- They did single cell RNA-sequencing, they can count the amount of molecules of a specific genes that we’re expressed in each neurons.
- Cells that have similar genes patterns are similar, they put them into categories (clustering)
What is neurogenic inflammation and how does it happen? (CRGP, substance P, plasma extravasion)
- efferent function of nociceptors
- inflammation that was caused to happen by neuronal activity
- When that neurons fires, 2 transmitters are released: CGRP and substance P, they dilate arteries really well.
- When that happens, there is plasma extravasation, the skin is gonna puff up, and it’s gonna be inflammated.
What are spinal reflexes?
- A muscle action without involvement of the brain.
- Up to spinal cord to decide whether reflex should be triggered.
What do ascending nociceptive pathways serve for?
- The info coming out of the second-order neurons, has to go to the cortex to be perceived.
- They travel up the white mater, either in the dorsal column or in the antero lateral column.
What are the 3 main ascending nociceptive pathways?
-spinothalamic tract: Spinal cord to thalamus, almost everything that is touch sensation goes to thalamus, touch or pain
-spinoreticular tract: spinal cord to reticular formation, specific to pain.
-spinoparabrachial: specific to pain, seems to be involved in the emotional side of pain.
goes form spinal cord to parabrachial, and from parabrachial to limbic system.
What is the use of somatotopy?
you can figure out which part of the body goes into which part of the cortex.
How is the trigmenial nerve constructed?
3 divisions:
- Ophtalmic (v1): eye area
- Maxillary (v2): nose area
- Mandibular (v3): mouth area
How is the visceral pain anatomy constructed?
- anatomy for visceral pain (organs) is slightly different
- most organs can feel some type of pain
- sometimes it goes right to dorsal rout ganglia
- but it often goes to other ganglia further from spinal cord to eventually end up in spinal cord
What is the difference between somatic and visceral termination?
- pattern of somatic termination: discrete, precise
- pattern of visceral termination: more diffused and all over the place
What does the diffused termination of visceral pain explain?
-visceral pain is harder to localize (tummy vs finger)