Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Acute pain

A

Less than 12 weeks

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2
Q

Chronic pain

A

More than 12 weeks

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3
Q

Nociceptive pain

A

Pain that arises from actual or threatened damage to non-neuronal tissue and is due to the activation of nociceptors

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4
Q

Neuropathic pain

A

Pain that is initiated or caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction of the nervous system e.g. due to spinal nerve root compression

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5
Q

1st, 2nd and 3rd order neurons between the sensory receptor located in the periphery and the perception of sensation at the level of the cerebral cortex:

A
  1. First order (primary afferent) neurone enters the spinal cord through a spinal nerve, or the brainstem through the trigeminal nerve, on the same side of the body (ipsilaterally) as the peripheral receptor is located
  2. The primary afferent neurone remains ipsilateral and synapses with a second order neurone within the CNS
  3. The cell body of the second order neurone is located within the spinal cord or brainstem. Its axons decussate to the other side of the CNS and ascend to the thalamus where it terminates
  4. The cell body of the third order neurone is located within the thalamus and its axons projects to the somatosensory cortex - located in the post-central gyrus of the parietal lobe of the cerebral hemisphere.
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6
Q

What are nociceptors

A

Sensory neurones that are found in any area of the body that can sense pain either externally or internally

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7
Q

External nociceptors

A

Skin
cornea
mucosa

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8
Q

Internal nociceptors

A

Viscera
Joints
Muscles
Connective tissue

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9
Q

Where do cell bodies of nociceptors resie

A

Either in dorsal root ganglion (body) or in trigeminal ganglion (face, head, neck)

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10
Q

Hyperalgesia

A

When there is tissue damage, BRADYKININ and PROSTAGLANDIN E2 both reduce the nociceptive action potential threshold thereby increasing their sensitivity to stimuli

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11
Q

Afferent fibres

A

Alpha delta fibres

C fibres

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12
Q

Alpha delta fibres

A
  • Thinly myelinated, small diameter (1-5 micrometres), medium conduction speed (5-40m/s)
  • Carries TOUCH, PRESSURE, TEMPERATURE and FAST pain information
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13
Q

C fibres

A

Unmyelinated, smallest diameter

SLOWEST conduction speed

Carries SLOW pain, temperature, touch, pressure, itch and postganglionic autonomic fibre information

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14
Q

Where do nociceptors synapse with secondary afferent neurones

A

Alpha delta and C fibres synapse with secondary afferent neurones in the GREY MATTER of the DORSAL column of the spinal cord (divided up by Rexed laminae)

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15
Q

Which neurotransmitters to afferent fibres release?

A

AD - Glutamate (Fast)

C - Glutamate and substance P (slow acting - involved in the mediation of dull aching pain)

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16
Q

Second order neurones transmit pain impulse up the …

A

spinothalamic tract

Trigemino-thalamic tract

17
Q

Spinothalamic tract

A

Carries pain, temperature and crude touch sensation from the body and enters the spinal cord at Lissaeur’s fasciculus.

18
Q

Trigemino-thalamic tract

A

Carries pain, temperature and crude touch sensation from the FACE, HEAD and NECK. First order neurons enter at the pons and then descend to the medulla, forming the spinal trigeminal tract.
Receives contributions from the trigeminal, facial, vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves.

19
Q

Both tracts terminate at the

A

ventral posterior lateral nucleus at the thalamus

20
Q

What is analgesia?

A

selective suppression of pain without effects on consciousness or other sensations

21
Q

What is anaesthesia?

A

the uniform suppression of pain (no pain is felt at all) and sometimes consciousness is lost (under general anaesthesia)

22
Q

Melzack-Wall pain gate?

A

states that non-painful input closes the “gate” to painful input, thereby preventing pain sensation from travelling to the somatosensory cortex to be perceived and thus felt

23
Q

Substance P

A
  • Peptide neurotransmitter involved in pain transmission
  • Also a vasodilator
  • Remains bound to receptors for longer time thereby transmitting long-lasting pain