pain 😢 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the definition of pain

A

an unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with potential tissue damage
-conscious
-arises in multiple sensory and emotional centres in the brain

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2
Q

what is the definition of nociception

A

the narrow process of encoding noxious stimuli

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3
Q

what is a noxious stimulus?

A

a stimulus strong enough to threaten the body’s integrity

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4
Q

what does nociception involve (v briefly) - like where does it go to and from

A

physiological process involves transduction, transmission and modulation of neural signals from periphery to CNS

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5
Q

is nociception conscious or unconscious

A

can be both

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6
Q

is pain conscious or unconscious

A

conscious

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7
Q

is nociception physiological or pathological

A

physiological

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8
Q

is pain physiological or pathological

A

pathological
not all pain is associated with a disease state

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9
Q

is acute pain physiological or pathological

A

physiological

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10
Q

is pain preventative or a learning experience

A

pain is a learning experience
- eg happens after reflex withdrawal from stimulus

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11
Q

is nociception preventative or a learning experience

A

preventative
enables healing and recovery

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12
Q

what is chronic pain then

A

persists beyond healing
disproportionate to injury
- eg
– disproportionate to nociceptive input
– pain in absence of nociceptive input

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13
Q

what type of nerves are sensory nerves

A

pseudounipolar nerves

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14
Q

what is the structure of a nociceptor

A

unmyelinated, small diameter nerve endings in skin sense actual or potential tissue damage

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15
Q

what are the 4 steps from initial physical stimulus to membrane depolarisation

A
  1. physical force - touch, muscular tension/stress
  2. changes membrane tension
  3. piezo activation - causes cation influx Na+ and Ca2+
  4. Na+ = membrane depolarisation - electrical signal
    Ca2+ = initiates calcium dependent signalling pathways
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16
Q

when are nociceptors stimulated

A

if surrounding tissues are inflamed
if tissue isnt damaged its hard to stimulate

17
Q

which compounds make a high threshold nociceptor into a low threshold nociceptor

A

bradykinin
PGE2
NGF

18
Q

which cation is a trigger for secondary messengers in the nervous system

A

Ca2+

19
Q

what changes does ‘central sensitisation in dorsal horn’ make relating to nociception

A
  • increases efficiency of nociceptive transmission
  • amplifies nociceptive input after injury
20
Q

how is the excitatory input modulated + where

A

in dorsal horn
by inhibitory nerves

21
Q

how is the ascending output from spinal cord balanced

A

ascending output from spinal cord is balanced by descending modulation from the brain

22
Q

what are the 4 types of nerve fibres

A

Aα - (fast, large diameter, myelinated) - relating to motor
Aß - (fast, large diameter, myelinated) carry APs from mechanoreceptors. they modulate C and A∂ activity within the dorsal horn

A∂ fibres - (slow, thin, myelinated) associated with sharp localised pain

C - (slow, thin, unmyelinated) associated with a dull aching, throbbing diffuse pain

23
Q

where do sensory nerves have their cell bodies

A

dorsal root ganglion

24
Q

what are the 5 steps in the nociceptive pain pathway

A

1) Transduction,
2) Conduction,
3) Transmission,
4) Modulation,
5) Perception,

25
Q

describe the transduction step in nociceptive pain pathway

A
  • peripheral terminals of nociceptive C fibers or A-delta (Aδ) fibers are depolarized by noxious mechanical, thermal, or chemical energy (which lowers activation threshold)
  • energy converted to action potential
26
Q

describe the conduction step in nociceptive pain pathway

A
  • the AP generated in the nociceptor terminal is conducted across the peripheral process to the central process
  • interneurons can facilitate or inhibit transmission to second order neurons
  • Ca2+ and second messengers induce central sensitisation in dorsal horn
  • the excitatory input is modulated by inhibitory nerves in dorsal horn
27
Q

describe the transmission step in nociceptive pain pathway

A
  • a nociceptive AP reaches the presynaptic terminal in the dorsal horn
  • the AP causes the presynaptic terminals of A∂ and C fibres to release a variety of pro-nociceptive substances into the synaptic cleft
  • this activates CGRP receptors
  • this causes an influx of ions that depolarize second order neurons and interneurons
28
Q

what does the modulation step of the nociceptive pain pathway involve

A

excitatory and inhibitory mechanisms

29
Q

describe the perception step in nociceptive pain pathway

A
  • dependant upon neural processing in the spinal cord and several brain regions
  • Action potentials ascending the spinothalamic tract are decoded by the thalamus
  • integration of sensations, emotions and cognition that result in our perception of pain
30
Q

what does the descending pain pathway do?

A

reduce the pain signal

31
Q

what is enkephalin

A

enkephalin is like a natural opioid - related to the endorphins. opioids activate the descending pain pathway

32
Q

what is gate control theory

A

rubbing the site of a painful stimulus helps alleviate pain
occurs at spinal cord level
concurrent activity in large-diameter AB primary afferents reducing the transmission of pain signals in small diameter C afferents