T2L11 physiology of pain 2 Flashcards
acute vs chronic pain
less than 3 months is acute
more than 3 months is chronic
acute pain
- nociceptive
- inflammatory
- neuropathic
eg post op, msk injury, burn
stops when site recovers
peripheral sensitization
- major mechanism of acute pain
- leads to pain hypersensitivity (hyperalgesia)
it is reduction in threshold of ends of peripheral nociceptors:
- reduction of threshold of TRPV1 channels (by bradykinin, nerve growth factor)
- reduction in threshold of sodium channels (by prostaglandins)
local anaesthetic
eg lidocaine (topically applied to skin) - sodium channel blockers
eg topical capsaicin treatment
- TRPV1 channel agonist
- repeat use reduces nociceptor firing by depleting substance P, causing peripheral terminals to die back (calcium overload causes mitochondrial dysfunction)
non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
eg aspirin, ibuprofen
- inhibit prostaglandin synthesis
- prevent peripheral sensitization
- overall reduces Na+ channel threshold
paracetamol
- not and NSAID
- inhibits cyclooxygenase COX enzymes
- does not reduce inflammation
- acts on descending serotonergic pathways
opioids
eg morphine, codeine, tramadol
- most effective pain relief but many side effects
- agonist of endogenous opioid system
sites of action at brainstem, spinal chord, periphery
gate control theory
- modulation of pain at spinal chord level
- pain evoked by nociceptors can be reduced by simultaneous activation of low threshold mechanorecepors (Aβ fibres) ie rubbing a hurting area will reduce pain
- stimulation of Aβ fibres in vicinity of injury activates interneurons in dorsal horn, which inhibit spinothalamic neurons
C fibres inhibit inhibitory interneurons (open gate)
Aβ fibres activate inhibitory interneurons (close gate)
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chronic pain
- inflammatory eg rheumatoid arthritis
2. neuropathic eg cns injury
neuropathic pain
- complex and both peripheral and cns
peripheral:
1. peripheral sensitization
- spontaneous firing of nociceptors
- increase axonal firing at injury site, due to accumulation of ions at regenerating tip eg spontaneous pain at knife wounds
central:
- central sensitization in spinal chord
- increase in the responsiveness of nociceptive neurons within the cns
- normal input produces abnormal responses
- due to reduced threshold in 2nd order neurons:
constant firing from periphery following injury»_space; sustained release of glutamate»_space;
prolonged depolarisation of postsynaptic membrane»_space;
influx of ca2+ through NMDA receptors»_space;
activation of kinases»_space;
phosphorylation of NMDA/AMPA»_space;
channel protein synthesis»_space;
more channels inserted
this is central hyperalgesia
SIMILAR TO LTP
- changes in activation patterns/cortical remapping in brain
the problem with central changes is they are not easily reversible
central allodynia
- non noxious Aβ fibres also synapse onto 2nd order spinothoracic neurons (normally nonfunctional)
following central sensitization:
- non noxious Aβ afferents activate sensitized 2nd order neurons
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other mechanisms of chronic pain
- altered synaptic connections:
- Aβ fibres form new sprouts that synapse into spinothalamic tract neurons - loss of inhibitory interneurons eg GABA/glycine
treatment for chronic pain
- difficult to treat
- good individual management is critical
can lead to
- depression
- sleep problems
- fatigue
Drugs: - Tricyclic antidepressants - Anticonvulsants - NMDA antagonists (All have analgesic properties)
Physiotherapy – e.g. manipulation of tissues, pacing
Psychological therapies – e.g. cognitive behavioral therapy
Surgery – e.g. spinal cord stimulator
tricyclic antidepressants
eg amitriptyline
mechanism of action is unclear
- acts on descending inhibitory pathways
- inhibits serotonin and noradrenaline reuptake
anticonvulsants
eg carbamazepine, pregabalin
- reduce spinal chord excitability
- blocks calcium channels (carbamazepine)
- blocks sodium channels (carbamazepine)
Pregabalin/gabapentin do not act on GABAergic interneurons
- Blocks presynaptic voltage-gated Ca2+ channels - Prevent release of glutamate from nociceptors