Sherpath Ch 44 Pain Flashcards
The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines pain as
“an unpleasant, subjective sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage”
Factors Influencing Perception of Pain
Both physical and emotional characteristics affect pain. These characteristics are influenced by the person’s cognitive, affective/behavioral, and sensory perceptions.
Functions of pain include
-protection: Warning signal about an unmet need, or malfunction of the nervous system secondary to a disease process
-warning/symptoms of disease
-response to injury: Thermal injuries (sunburn), Mechanical injury (fracture),
Chemical injury (inhalation of toxic fumes), Ischemic injury (lack of oxygen to body tissues)
Pattern Theory
-proposed the physiologic basis of pain and provided the foundation for the gate control theory of pain
-When injury occurs, sensations (stimulation of nerve endings) relay a unique pattern or sequence of signals to the brain.
-The brain deciphers the pattern and correlates it with the sensation.
-The pattern determines whether the brain interprets the stimuli as pain.
Gate Control Theory of Pain
-this theory looked at pain via the mind-body perspective, explaining the influence of cognitive and emotional factors on pain perception.
-Tissue damage causes a stimulus to be sent to the brain.
-The stimulus first travels to three locations in the spinal cord.
-One of these locations, the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, provides a gating mechanism.
-The signals at this gate determine whether or not pain is felt. If the gate closes, the impulses are not transmitted to the brain and no pain is perceived. If the signals reach a specific level of intensity, the gate opens, allowing the signal to reach the brain and pain to be felt.
-State-of-mind and lifestyle choices can affect the intensity of the stimuli. For example, depression may cause the gate to remain open more often
Neuromatrix Theory
-this theory proposed that the central nervous system, rather than injury at the periphery, is responsible for pain sensation.
-Pain is a complex issue that cannot be explained solely by physical factors.
-Perception of painful stimuli results from the neuromatrix, a unique genetically controlled network of neurons affected by an individual’s subjective physical, psychological, cognitive, and life experiences.
-Input from the periphery, such as tissue trauma, can initiate or affect but not create a neurosignature (the signal created by the neuromatrix).
-Specific neurosignatures elicit corresponding sensations, and alterations in signals yield memories of the experience, allowing the same sensation to be felt if the same circumstance occurs in the future.
A nociceptor is a
peripheral nerve ending, or sensory neuron, that initiates the sensation of pain by sending “threat” stimuli to the spinal cord and brain and is sensitive to thermal, mechanical, and chemical stimuli
Nociceptors are distributed throughout the body in
joints, muscles, skin, and viscera (internal organs), but density differs in each area
Parietal Lobe
The sensory-discriminative aspect of the brain helps the person localize where on the body injury occurred.
Nociception is the process by which
pain is conducted from the periphery to the central nervous system. The event begins with the conversion of the noxious stimuli (injury) to an electrical impulse, which is transmitted from one neuron (nerve) to the next with the help of neurotransmitters.
Occipital Lobe
The cortical brain regions process the pain (cause of pain or reaction of pain) from the body and generate the actual experience of pain
Cerebellum
The thalamus is a relay station that distributes sensory signals to several other regions of the brain.
Brain Stem
Pain signals travel from the spinal cord to the brain, including the brainstem, thalamus, and cerebral cortex
Temporal Lobe
The cognitive-evaluative aspect of the brain allows the person to plan ways of removing or getting away from the pain.
Frontal Lobe
The affective-motivational aspect of the brain conveys the degree of unpleasantness of the pain experience.