Physiology of pain Flashcards
What is pain?
An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience, associated with, or resembling that associated with actual or potential tissue damage.
What is pain accompanied with?
An emotional reaction e.g. fear, anxiety, a negative effect.
What are the two main types of pain?
Adaptive
Pathological
What is adaptive pain?
Pain that we learn and adapt from - usually good protective pain.
Adaptive pain can be further divided into inflammatory and ____.
Nociceptive
How is somatic pain different from visceral?
Somatic felt in peripheral tissues e.g. skin, joints, muscles (superficial or deep). Visceral felt in organs.
What is nociceptive pain?
Pain that is causes by damage to tissue - somatic pain or visceral pain.
What are nociceptors?
Primary sensory afferent neurons that detect noxious information.
Found in nerve endings all over body.
Where does neuropathic pain originate?
In the CNS or PNS.
Usually caused by a chronic, progressive nerve disease. Can also occur due to injury or infection.
What is an example of central nerve damage?
Stroke
Parkinsons
Which types of sensations would suggest peripheral nerve damage?
Burning
Tingling
Pins + needles
What is dysfunctional pain?
Pain that has not been caused by any damage, therefore pain is the pathology.
There is a dysfunctional amplification of normal sensory signals.
Fibromyalgia, IBS.
What morphology are nociceptors?
Pesudo-unipolar - cell body is in the dorsal root ganglion.
What are free nerve endings?
Nerve endings in the periphery that are not encapsulated by anything (Non-encapsulated dendrites).
They are unique to nociceptors.
Alpha delta or C sensory fibres.
How are free nerve endings different to other nerve endings?
Other nerve endings (e.g. Merkel discs, Pacinian corpuscles) have a capsule around them and are also Alpha Beta sub types, whereas free nerve endings are A-delta/C.
The larger the diameter of sensory nerve fibres means the larger the what?
Myelination.
Which sub-type of nerve fibres have the largest and smallest diameter and what sensations do they transmit?
Are nociceptors first, second, or third order neurons?
First order neurons.
Which nociceptor fibres mediate a fast, sharp pricking pain? And which mediate a slow, dull ache?
Fast pricking - A delta (first response)
Slow ache - C (second response)
What is a reflex arc and what nerve fibre activates this?
A neural pathway that controls a reflex without the signal having to go to CNS first. Brain receives the input as the reflex is being carried out.
Activated by A-delta fibres.
Is there are first and second response with visceral pain?
No - only a first response, which is why visceral pain feels deep and dull as it’s only innervated by C fibres.