Pain Flashcards
1
Q
nociception
A
- perception of pain
- Requires specialized receptors that can respond to stimuli including:
- Extreme temperatures (hold and cold)
- Mechanical stimulation (ie. Stabs, pricks)
- Chemical stimulation (ie. Acid exposure)
2
Q
nociceptors
A
- pain receptors (free nerve endings) are activated when a stimulus exceeds a noxious threshold
- classes of pain receptors: A-Delta and C-Fibres
- Neurotransmitters utilized by nociceptive fibers: glutamate, substance P, CGRP
3
Q
A-Delta Fibres
A
- myelinated
- Localized first “sharp” pain
- Respond to: mechanical (pinching) and thermal (hot/cold extreme)
4
Q
C-Fibres
A
- unmyelinated
- Mediate the diffuse, poorly localized “second pain”
- Respond to: mechanical, thermal, chemical stimulation
5
Q
pain
A
- Unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage
- Even in the absence of tissue damage (ie. Psychological causes), can still be described as pain
- Not stimulus-dependant
6
Q
symptoms of pain in animals
A
- Failure to groom
- Changes in posture/gait
- Decreased food and water intake
- Lethargy/reluctance to move
- Vocalizations
- Failure to interact with conspecifics
- Avoiding or resentment of handling
- Scratching or biting
7
Q
why is pain necessary?
A
- allows you to use your body correctly without damaging it and modulating what you do
- Necessary for survival
- inability to feel pain can have devastating consequences (ex. Ashlyn Blocker)
8
Q
Ashlyn Blocker
A
- Can feel:
- Pressure
- Distinguish between soft touch and strong touch
- Temperature: hot and cold
- Empathy and emotional pain
- Some types of fear (emotional fear)
- Cannot feel:
- Extreme temperatures (very hot and very cold)
- Cannot understand pain in others
9
Q
Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP)
A
- class of disorders that make people unable to feel pain
- Dangerous condition – increased risk of: oral cavity damage, fractures, corneal damage
- Individuals with CIP more likely to die during childhood (ie. Injuries, Illnesses, Burns)
10
Q
causes of insensitivity to pain
A
- gene mutations (family of disorders)
- ex. mutation in gene SCN9A
- Different mutation: severe pain and chronic pain disorder
- Encodes a sodium ion channel (local anesthetics likely to work on same channels)
- This channel highly expressed on nociceptive neurons
- Important “amplification” channels that contribute to neurons firing action potentials
11
Q
SCN9A knockout studies in mice
A
Use KO mice - decreased response to mechanical and inflammatory pain
12
Q
pain processing in naked mole rat
A
- Naked mole rats are pain insensitive (at skin level)
- Mutation in TrkA likely responsible for pain insensitivity
- High temperature (in room, water, etc.): caused nerve growth factor (NGF) to bind to TrkA receptor
- Signal cascade resulting in sensitization/opening of the TRPV1 channel on sensory neurons
- Sensory neurons fire action potentials: sends info to brain = painful stimulus
13
Q
naked mole rats: does pain insensitivity cause survival disadvantage?
A
- TrkA mutation: hypo-functional
- Requires 10x more NGF to initiate a response (but not dysfunctional)
- Development: pain receptor (TrkA) numbers are much higher in newborns than adults
- Potential advantages:
- Help survive in abrasive, hot underground tunnels
- Energy conservation – low metabolic rate