Pathophysiology of pain Flashcards
1
Q
General Somatosensory Pain Pathway
A
1. First Order Neurons (primary afferent neuron) PNS
- Nociceptor sense noxious stimulus
- cell body in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) or trigeminal ganglion to face, for ex)
- synapses in doral horn with second order neuron
2. Second Order Neurons (CNS)
- cell bodies in spinal cord
- crosses immediately in anterior white matter of cord
- ascend in spinothalamic tract to VPL nucleus of thalamus
3. Third Order Neurons (CNS)
- VPL thalamus
- project to somatosensory cortex
- via posterior limb of internal capsule
- Perception of pain
2
Q
Pain transduction
A
- Different sensory receptors respond to different types of stimuli
- exist at free nerve endings of primary afferent neurons
- Types:
- Mechanical (stretch, pressure, sharp pain)
- Chemical (histamines, prostanoids, etc)
- Thermal (hot/cold)
- Polymodal (can detect multiple things)
- Physical stimuli converted into electrical impulses
3
Q
Pain CONDUCTION
A
Within peripheral nerve:
-
A delta fibres
- light myelination
- FAST transmitters
- “first pain”
- well localized pain
- also inhibit interneurons which stop C fibres from transmitting
-
C Fibres:
- unmyelinated
- activated by bradykinin, cytokines, sub P etc
- DELAYED transmitters
- dull, aching burning pain
- poor localization, large receptive fields
- significant in visceral pain
4
Q
Chemical mediators of pain
A
Substances released when tissue is damaged, which activates nociceptors:
- Arachidonic acid
- glutamate
- prostaglandins
- substance P
- bradykinins
- potassium
- noradrenaline
- 5HT
- lactic acid
5
Q
Pathophysioloyg of neurogenic inflammation
A
- neuromodulator release
- substance P
- ATP
- glutamate
- acts on peripheral blood vessels, mast cells, sympathetic nerves
- causes vasodilation, vascular permeability, etc
6
Q
Descending modulation of pain
A
- Sensory cortex neurons project down –>
- Periaqueductal gray in midbrain
- neurons project down into medulla –>
- Stimulate neurons in nucleus raphe magnus
- neurons project down through spinal cord
- inhibitory effect on second order sensory neurons in spinal cord
- stimulate interneurons in cord –>
- inhibitory interneurons inhibit second order sensory neuron
- Endogenous opioids are released in this pathway, release firing of action potential on second order neuron
7
Q
Endogenous opioids and receptors
A
- B-endorphins (mu receptors)
- Dynorphins (bind to kappa receptors)
- Enkephalins (bind to delta receptors)
8
Q
Central sensitization
A
- “Wind up”
- Prolonged C fibre firing leads to increased presynaptic release of neurotransmitters
- causes depolarization of post synaptic neurons
- NMDA receptor on ion channel normally blocked by magnesium ion
- prolonged firing of C fibre releases magnesium ion
- calcium flows through, increases excitability, potentiates post synaptic response
9
Q
Somatosensory system
A
- “body wall” to brain
- skin to parietal lung and peritoneum
- oral mucosa
10
Q
Visceral pain receptors
A
- Polymodal
- C fibres
- Mechanosensory
- Chemoreceptors
- Thermoreceptors
11
Q
Visceral innervation
A
- unmyelinated C fibres
- afferent nerves
- have wide spread through spinal cord and may project to other segments
- poorly localized and referred pain
- Shares many spinal root levels, convergence of afferent nerves