Pain and Analgesia Flashcards

1
Q

How does the brain naturally suppress perception of pain?

A
  • descending pathways
  • Periventricular nuclei (PVN) nerves in hypothalamus signals to periaqueductal grey nerves (PAG) of the mesencephalon and upper pons
  • PAG nerves signal to Raphe magnus nucleus (RMN) of the pons via enkephalin release
  • RMN nerves signal to inhibitory interneurons in dorsal horn of spinal cord via serotonin release
  • Inhibitory neurones release enkephalin or GABA
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2
Q

What is the effect of GABA?

A
  • GABA activates Cl- channels on DHN (ascending pain fibre) - Cl- moves into cell - hyperpol. - reduced DHN firing
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3
Q

What is the effect of enkephalin?

A

Activates opioid receptors expressed by A delta and C fibres and dorsal horn neurones (pre and post synaptic)
- Reduced transmission of nociception by 2 actions
PRE - inhibit opening of Ca2+ channels - reduced Ca2+ entry and less transmitter release
POST - inhibit DHN depolarisation by opening K+ channels - K+ moves out - DHN hyperpolarised

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4
Q

When is natural analgesia encouraged to occur?

A
  • relaxation techniques to increase enkephalin and serotonin release centrally
  • Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) - stimulate peripheral inhibitory pathways by releasing enkephalins
  • Application of pressure - rubbing injury - inhibitory interneurons can be activated A beta fibres (mechanoreceptors) + relaxing brain
  • Heat treatments
  • Ice pack
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5
Q

How do hot and cold treatments encourage natural analgesia?

A
  • Heat - soothing stiff joints and lower back pain - increase BF and relax muscles
  • Cold - reduce inflammation (reduce BF) and reduce nociceptor activation
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6
Q

What are the three way that pharmacological analgesia works?

A
  1. reduced nociceptor activation
  2. reduced activation of ascending DHNs
  3. activating descending inhibitory pathways
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7
Q

What are the main analgesic treatments?

A

Opioids, NSAIDs, local anaesthetics, anti-depressants

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8
Q

How do opioids work?

A
  • Act in same way as enkephalin (inhibit Ca2+ channels pre-synaptically, open K+ channels post-synaptically, reduce signal firing)
  • Stimulate RMNs to activate interneurons
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9
Q

What is the main problem with opioids?

A

Huge potential for addiction (physical and psychological dependence)

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10
Q

In what situations are opioids used?

A

Surgical pain, child birth or pain that doesn’t respond to any other drugs

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11
Q

What are the side effects of opioids?

A
  • Euphoria and sense of well-being
  • Constipation (opioid receptors in gut oppose parasympathetic activation of contraction)
  • Nausea + vomiting (stimulation of chemoreceptors in medulla)
  • Resp depression - reduction in sensitivity of respiratory centre to CO2
  • Withdrawal symptoms include nausea, muscle aches, diarrhoea, trouble sleeping, low mood
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12
Q

How do NSAIDs reduce pain?

A

Inflammation - release of prostaglandins - hyperalgesia

- NSAIDs inhibit COX 1 + 2 - inhibit PG production to reduce hyperalgesia

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13
Q

What are the side effects of NSAIDs?

A
  • Peptic ulcers + GI bleeding
  • Na and H20 retention, hypertension, hemodynamic acute kidney injury
  • Stroke, MI
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14
Q

How do local anaesthetics reduce pain?

A

Induce absence of sensation in specific part of body
- surgical and dental procedures
Block initiation and propagation of AP by pain fibres
- LA enter cell, is ionised and binds to Na+ channels closing inactivation gate - no new APs

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15
Q

How might bacteria effect the efficacy of LAs?

A

Bacteria produce acidic by-products

- more ionised LA outside cell, LA cannot enter cell via channel pore, reduced effectiveness

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16
Q

Why might LAs be given in conjunction with a vasoconstrictor e.g. adrenaline ?

A

To confine the spread to other tissues and reduce blood loss

17
Q

What are the common side effects of LAs?

A

Nausea, dizziness, bruising, redness, itching, swelling where injected

18
Q

What are the less common but more serious side effects?

A

Drowsiness, mental/mood changes, ringing in the ears, vision changes, tremors, numbness, headache, backache

19
Q

How do antidepressants reduce pain?

A
  • Increase serotonin levels in synaptic cleft
  • Increase activation of descending analgesic pathways - less nociceptive signals passed to DHNs
  • Also help break cycle of physiological and physical effects of pain-