Somatosensation ll (neuro) Flashcards

1
Q

2 major central pathways of the somatosensory system

A
  • Dorsal column-medial lemniscal system (DCML)

- Spinothalamic tract (anterolateral system) (STT)

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2
Q

Ascending pathways

A
  • Ascending pathways mediating sensory aspects of pain for body and face
  • 2nd order neurons decussate and project to ventral-posterior nuclear complex of
    thalamus
    • VPL: body
    • VPM: face
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3
Q

positions of DCML and STT

A
  • DCML and STT cross the midline at different sites

- Differential loss of temperature/pain vs fine tactile discrimination

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4
Q

What is pain?

A
Dual aspect model:
1. Sensory-discriminative
• Location  
• Intensity
• Duration 
• Quality
2. Affective-motivational
• Unpleasantness – the painfulness of pain
• Effects on arousal, mood (affect), behaviour
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5
Q

Nociceptors

A
  • Nociceptors are neurons specialized for detection of painful stimuli
  • A-delta and C-fibres contribute different aspects of pain sensation
  • The TRPV1 receptor is involved in transduction of noxious heat
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6
Q

Maintenance of nociceptor activity after injury

A
  • ‘Inflammatory soup’ of cytokines, prostaglandins and small signalling molecules
    maintains depolarisation and sensitivity of C-fibre terminals after original stimulus:
    • Hyperalgaesia
    • Allodynia
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7
Q

The Anterolateral system (STT)

A

Dorsal horn interneurons:
• Located in superficial and deep layers of dorsal horn
• Synaptic input from C- and A-δ fibres
• Axons cross and ascend in anterolateral white matter
• Some are multi-modal (receive convergent nociceptive and non-nociceptive inputs)
• Some receive convergent input from visceral afferents

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8
Q

Cortical representation of pain

A
  • Cortical representation of pain is
    complex
  • STT projects to S1 via VP nuclei of thalamus (like DCML system)
  • however, STT and DCML axons do not converge on same thalamic neurons – pathways are parallel
  • S1 is necessary for the localization of pain, but stimulation of S1 gives rise to referred tactile, not painful, sensations
  • Additional areas are involved in pain sensations
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9
Q

Two systems in central pain processing

A
  • Diverge at level of thalamus
  • Lateral system (do not confuse with anterolateral system):
    • VP nuclei of thalamus, in parallel with DCML system
    • Primary and secondary somatosensory cortex (SI and SII)
  • Medial system:
    • Midline nuclei of thalamus (intralaminar)
    • Anterior cingulate and insular cortex
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10
Q

Lateral and medial pain systems

A
- Lateral:
• Sensory-discriminative
• Project via specific somatosensory thalamic 
nuclei
- Medial:
• Affective-motivational
• Project to different cortical areas via (non-
specific) midline thalamic nuclei
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11
Q

Descending modulation of pain pathways

A
  • Analgaesic properties of opium known for centuries

- Endogenous opioids (enkephalins, endorphins) and opioid receptors discovered 1970s-80s

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12
Q

Treatment of pain

A
  • Successful at treating pain as neuro-physiological response to tissue damage:
    • NSAID
    • Opiate drugs
  • Chronic pain:
    •antidepressants (e.g., amitriptyline, duloxetine)
    •At lower dosage and in absence of diagnosis of
    clinical depression
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13
Q

Chronic pain

A
  • > 3 months
  • Alarmingly high prevalence
  • May be due to nerve damage from prior injury:
    neuropathic pain
  • However, increasingly accepted that pain can be dissociated from tissue damage
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14
Q

Pain dissociated from tissue damage

A
  • Phantom limb pain

- Central pain

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15
Q

Anterior cingulotomy for intractable

pain

A
  • Targeted lesion to disconnect anterior cingulate cortex on both sides
  • Used for decades as last resort
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