Physiology of Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Define pain

A

An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience which is associated with actual tissue damage or described in terms of such damage

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2
Q

What are the three forms of pain?

A
  1. Nociceptive - specific primary sensory afferent neurones normally activated by intense noxious stimuli
  2. Inflammatory - activation of immune system by tissue injury or infection
  3. Pathological
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3
Q

Which type of pain is not adaptive?

A

Pathological pain

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4
Q

What is pathological pain?

A

Pain that outlives its biological or adaptive purpose - neuropathic = damage to neural tissue

dysfucntional - no identifiable damage or inflammation eg fibromyalgia

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5
Q

What is adaptive pain?

A

Pain which serves as an early warning system to detect and minimise contact with damaging stimuli

(nociceptive and inflammatory pain)

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6
Q

What threshold level does nociceptive pain have?

A

High

It is activated by intense stimuli

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7
Q

Which type of pain is associated with pain hypersensitivity?

A

Inflammatory pain

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8
Q

What is pain hypersensitivity?

A

An increased behavioural response to a constant painful stimulus in order to allow for healing

This is adaptive

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9
Q

What is allodynia?

A

Increased sensitivity to painful region and when non-painful stimuli cause pain.

This is to ensure constact with the painful area is minimised to allow for healing

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10
Q

Which two types of pathological pain exist?

A
  1. Neuropathic pain
  2. Dysfunctional pain
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11
Q

What is neuropathic pain?

A

Pain caused due to nerve cell damage

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12
Q

What is dysfunctional pain?

A

A potentially irregular processing of inoculous information in the CNS

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13
Q

What is the name of the condition that results in complete absense of pain?

A

Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP)

Caused by a loss of function mutation affecting voltage activated sodium channels which are highly expressed in nociceptive receptors

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14
Q

What are the two types of nociceptor?

A
  1. Aδ fibres
  2. C fibres
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15
Q

What are the 3 main differences regarding Aδ and C nociceptive fibres?

A
  1. Aδ fibres are thinly myelinated, C fibres are not
  2. Aδ fibres only respond to thermal or mechanical stimuli whilst C fibres respond to all noxious stimuli (polymodal)
  3. Aδ fibres confer “fast” pain, whilst C fibres confer “slow” pain
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16
Q

What is the pathway from the sensory receptor to the CNS for pain?

A
  1. Nociceptor
  2. Second order neurone
  3. Spinothalmic or spinoreticulothalmic tracts
17
Q

Which type of nociceptive fibre has:

a) A really high heat threshold (53 degrees)
b) A more moderate heat threshold (43 degrees)

A

a) Aδ type I
b) Aδ type II

18
Q

What is the neurotransmitter associated with nociceptive receptors?

A

Glutamate

19
Q

How is nociceptive information sent to the CNS within the dorsal horn?

A
  • Glutamate
  • Peptides (substance P and neurokinin A)
20
Q

What is the efferent function of C fibres?

A

Pro-inflammatory mediator release from peripheral terminals (calcitonin and substance P)

21
Q

Which nerve fibre transmits proprioceptive stimuli?

A

Aβ fibres

22
Q

How many major nociceptie tracts are there?

A

2

23
Q

what are the 4 distinct processes int eh physiology of pain

A

transduction - noxious stimulus into electrical activity

transmission - pain signal as nerve impulse

modulation - modification of pain transmission in nervous sytem - opioids

perception - conscious expereince of pain

24
Q

What is nociceptive pain?

A

nromal response to injury by noxious stimuli

25
Q

referred pain - what is it?

A

Pain developed in one part of the body but can be felt elsewhere; usually deep pain or visceral pain is referred