Pain Signalling Flashcards
Define pain
An unpleasant sensory + emotional experience associated with or resembling actual or potential tissue damage
What are the types of pain receptors?
A delta
C
Compare A delta + C pain receptors
- A delta: fast, sharp pain | myelinated
- C: slow, burning pain | unmyelinated
Describe A delta pain recpetors
- fast pain |myelinated
- Sharp pain
Describe C pain receptors
- slow pain | unmyelinated
- burning pain
What pathway is pain a part of?
Spinothalamic pathway
Location of 1st, 2nd + 3rd order neurone cell body in spinothalamic pathway
- 1st: dorsal root ganglion
- 2nd: dorsal horn
- 3rd thalamus
Outline the sensory dimension of the pain pathway
- part of the spinothalamic pathway
- stimulus detected by either A delta or C pain receptors
- axon synapses on 2nd order neurones in dorsal horn (in pain gate)
- axon deccusates + ascend up to 3rd order neurones in thalamus
What are the dimensions of pain?
Sensory (feeling of chemical or physical pain)
Affective (related to how you feel from limbic system)
Outline the pain gate + its different synapses + neurotransmitters
- A delta + C 1st order neurones synapses on 2nd order neurone in dorsal horn (excitatory)
- neurones from mechanoreceptors synapse onto inhibitory neurones which project to pain gate using GABA + encephalins onto mu receptors > inhibit pain e.g. rubbing area to feel better
- descending pathways from cortex to spinal cord inhibit 2nd order sensory neurones using NA + serotonin
Outline the effect of mechanoreceptors on the pain gate including neurotransmitters involved
Neurones from mechanoreceptors synapse onto inhibitory neurones which project to pain gate using GABA + encephalins onto mu receptors > inhibit pain
e.g. rubbing area to feel better
Outline the general effect of descending pathways on the pain gate including neurotransmitters involved
- Descending pathways from cortex to spinal cord inhibit 2nd order sensory neurones using NA + serotonin
- can include stress, menstrual cycle + chocolate
What structure in the midbrain is involved in pain transmission?
Peri-aqueductal grey
(Mickey mouse’s mouth)
What structure in the medulla is involved in pain transmission?
Reticular formation
Physiological affect on stress on pain
- involves amygdala
- sends axons onto peri-aqueductal grey in midbrain
- which sends axons to reticular formation in medulla
- descending pathway to spinal cord + pain gate
- inhibtis pain gate using NA + serotonin