Pain Flashcards
Definitions
- analgesia
- dysesthesia
- hyperalgesia
- allodynia
Analgesia - absence of pain in response to stimulation which would normally be painful
Dysesthesia - unpleasant abnormal sensation
- hyperalgesia - increased sensitivity to stimuli that would normally provoke pain
- allodynia - pain from stimulus that does not normally cause pain
What are the characteristics of
- unmyelinated C fibres
- thin myelinated A delta
Unmyelinated C
- respond to chemical, mechanical, thermal stimuli
- dull, diffuse, ache
Thin myelinated A delta
- mechanical stimuli
- localised sharp pain
What are examples of some chemical mediators that act on
- nociceptors
- CNS
Describe how opioid receptors contribute to analgesia
- presynaptically
- postsynaptically
Act on nociceptors
- Histamine
- Prostaglandins
- Bradykinin
- Adenosine
- Seretonin
CNS from DH
- Substance P => pain signal
- Enkephalins, endorphins=> reduce pain signal
Presynaptic
-reduced Ca influx => reduced Substance P release
Postsynaptic
-increased K influx => increased hyperpolarisation
Describe the afferent pathway and the efferent analgesic pathway
Afferent - spinothalamic
- Primary afferent => DRG
- Decussation at SC
- Synapse at thalamus
- Synapse at cerebral cortex
Efferent analgesic pathway
- Cortex => thalamus
- Periaqueductal grey, raphe nucleus => seretonergic and noradrenergic fibres onto enkaphalin containing neuron
What are the 4 different types of pain
Nociceptive - pain from actual/threatened damage to non neural tissue due to activation of nociceptors
Neuropathic - pain from lesion/disease of somatosensory nervous system
Acute - pain relating to tissue injury or inflammation that resolves when healed
-if inadequately treated => chronic
Chronic - 3months+, cannot be easily explained, physical tissue injury not found
Common causes of neuropathic pain
Key features of neuropathic pain
Nerve injury
Trigeminal/postherpetic neuralgia
Post amputation pain
Diabetic neuropathy
Spontaneous pain in absence of noxious stimulus
Pain in areas of sensory loss or allodynia
How would you manage acute pain?
How would this differ from chronic pain
Analgesia - oral, parenteral
Immobilisation
Nerve blocks - peripheral, epidural
Analgesic strategies are less effective due to tolerance and dependence