Pain Peripheral Mechanisms and Central Pathways Flashcards

1
Q

Describe how a pain signal travels to the brain to be processed.

A
  1. Stimulus activates receptor
  2. AP elicited in Dorsal Route Ganglion nerves
  3. AP enters spinal cord and synapses onto ascending nerve in dorsal route horn
  4. Nerve crosses over in spinal cord and ascends to brain (usually via thalamus)
  5. Signal travels to sensory cortex where it is processed and acted upon
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2
Q

What are pain receptors called?

A

Nociceptors

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3
Q

What kind of sense is pain and what does this mean?

A

Somatic sense - not dependent on a specific organ

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4
Q

Where are nociceptors found?

A

Widespread throughout body

- not so many in brain

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5
Q

What kind of stimuli can cause slow, dull pain?

A

chemical, mechanical, thermal

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6
Q

What kind of stimuli can cause fast, sharp pain?

A

Mechanical, thermal

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7
Q

Which chemicals can activate nociceptors?

A

Histamine, bradykinin, 5-HT (serotonin), prostaglandin, K+, H+ (pH)

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8
Q

What is the cellular response when nociceptors are activated?

A

Ca2+ influx
Sets up AP
Na+ channel-dependent conduction in nerve to spinal cord + brain

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9
Q

What are the different types of nociceptors?

A

Myelinated neurons - A Delta fibres
Unmyelinated neurons - C fibres
Gracile fasciculus - A delta (synapse and cross over in medulla_
Facial nerves (trigeminal) - C fibres (immediately cross over, dental pain)

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10
Q

Compare myelinated neurons and unmyelinated neurons in terms of pain.

A

Myelinated - rapid conduction velocity, sharp, immediate, highly localised, superficial tissue
Unmyelinated - slow, dull, delay (+linger), hard to locate, superficial and deep tissue

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11
Q

Describe the spino-reticular tract.

A
  • Ascending pathway in white matter of spinal cord
  • Responsible for transmission of pain, temperature and crude touch to somatosensory region of thalamus
  • Increases our level of alertness
  • First, second and third order neurons
  • First - dorsal route ganglion
  • Second - send afferents to thalamus
  • Third - send afferents to sensory cortex
  • Glutamate release in synapses
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12
Q

Why would it be advantageous to inform the hypothalamus of injury when a person is in a potentially harmful situation?

A

Activate fight or flight response to get out of a harmful situation

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13
Q

How does the hypothalamus contribute to nociception?

A
  • Part of limbic system (part of brain involved in behavioural and emotional responses)
  • Influences outlook on and response to pain (e.g. crying)
  • Amplify pain signal, behaviours for survival
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14
Q

What are some of the autonomic responses to pain?

A

Sympathetic - fear, pupillary dilation, pallor (blood diverted away from skin), sweating
Parasympathetic - bradycardia, syncope, hypotension, urination, nausea (less useful)

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15
Q

What is referred pain?

A

When pain from a visceral organ is felt in a superficial area of the body

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16
Q

What is the purpose of pain?

A

It is necessary and protective

- when is it absent, can lead to ulcers forming after surgery, amputations etc.

17
Q

Compare acute vs chronic pain.

A

Acute - physiological, nociceptive and inflammatory, sudden onset in response to discrete event, recedes during healing

Chronic - pathological, neuropathic pain, persists long after recovery (>3 months), often difficult to tie to specific event, often unresponsive to analgesics

18
Q

Describe the characteristics of neuropathic pain.

A
  • Occurs as a result of lesion or disease in P/CNS
    E.g. diabetic neuropathy, MS, fibromyalgia, spinal cord injury
  • Can present as burning or tickling or dull aches
  • May be associated with allodynia or hyperalgesia
  • Due to sensitization of peripheral and central neurones
19
Q

What is allodynia?

A

Sensation of pain in response to something not normally painful in nature e.g. light touch near a wound

20
Q

What is hyperalgesia?

A

Increased intensity of pain sensation for a nociceptive stimulus (small stimulus, large response)

21
Q

Describe peripheral sensitization of neurones that contribute to neuropathic pain.

A
  • Increased sensitivity of C and A delta fibres due to prostaglandin release
  • Increased voltage-dependent Na+ channel expression - increased likelihood that threshold potential is reached
22
Q

Describe central sensitization that contributes to neuropathic pain.

A
  • increased glutamate release due to peripheral sensitization
  • increased expression of glutamate receptors
    (both cause hyperalgesia)
  • sprouting of A beta (mechanoreceptor) fibres to make new connections with ascending neurons
    (cause allodynia)
23
Q

What is phantom limb pain?

A
  • Type of neuropathic pain due to reorganisation of cortex and sensitization
  • Area in sensory cortex no longer receiving signals
  • Nerves migrate into adjacent areas of brain
  • Nerves respond to signals coming from other parts of body
24
Q

How is the psychological aspect of pain treated?

A
  • Chronic pain and depression form a vicious cycle

- Talk therapy, peer support, inpatient or outpatient pain programs, stress-reduction skills