Barker Patho of Pain Flashcards

1
Q

What are examples of acute pain?

A

-Injury
-post-operative flare

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2
Q

When can pain be considered chronic pain?

A

When it lasts for more than 3 months

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3
Q

What are the types of chronic pain?

A

-Nociceptive (somatic)
-Central neuropathic
-Peripheral neuropathic
-Visceral
-Mixed

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4
Q

Which types of pain are considered inflammatory pain?

A

-Nociceptive (somatic)
-Visceral

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5
Q

Examples of nociceptive (somatic) pain

A

-Osteoarthritis
-Rheumatoid arthritis
-Osteosarcoma
-Skin/deep tissue

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6
Q

Examples of central neuropathic pain

A

-Post-stroke
-Multiple sclerosis
-Spinal cord injury
-Migraine
-HIV related neuropathic pain

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7
Q

Examples of peripheral neuropathic pain

A

-Post-herpetic neuralgia
-Diabetic neuropathy

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8
Q

Examples of visceral pain

A

-Internal organ
-Pancreatitis
-Inflammatory bowel syndrome

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9
Q

Examples of mixed pain

A

-Lower back
-Cancer
-Fibromyalgia

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10
Q

Functions of pain

A

-Warning system
-Aid in repair (hypersensitivity)
-Can be maladaptive

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11
Q

Temporal features of pain

A

-Onset
-Duration
-Course
-Pattern

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12
Q

How is inflammatory pain described?

A

Throbbing or pulsating

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13
Q

How is neuropathic pain described?

A

Stabbing, shooting, burning or tingling

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14
Q

How is visceral pain described?

A

Squeezing

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15
Q

Why does pain impact mood?

A

Pain is an emotion

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16
Q

How does pain travel through the nervous system?

A

-Pain travels from the site of trauma in the periphery to the spinal cord through peripheral nerves, to the dorsal root ganglia, then to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
-The spinal cord then sends signals to the brain via the spinothalamic tract. This signal is referred to as the ascending input
-The brain then sends a signal back down to the spinal cord to activate reflex responses in the periphery. This signal is known as the descending modulation

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17
Q

Which receptors are the temperature sensitive receptors?

A

-Transient receptor potential cation channel (TRP)
-TRPV (vanilloid) = heat
-TRPM (melastatin) = cold

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18
Q

Which receptors are the acid-sensitive receptors?

A

Acid-sensing ion channel (ASIC) = activated by H+ and conducts Na+

19
Q

Which receptors are pressure sensing receptors?

A

-MDEG
-DRASIC
-TREK-1

20
Q

Chemicals in the body that cause pain

A

-Histamine
-Bradykinin

21
Q

Which nerve brings pain signals from the skin to the spinal cord?

A

Afferent nerve

22
Q

Which nerve brings pain signals from the spinal cord to the muscle to generate a reflex response?

A

Efferent nerve

23
Q

Which receptors are activated in the synapse of the spinal cord to send signals to the brain or periphery?

A

-AMPA
-mGluR
-NMDAR

24
Q

Which chemical activates receptors in the spinal cord?

A

Glutamate

25
Q

Which three pain fibers transduce pain signals to the spinal cord?

A

-Abeta-fibers
-Adelta-fibers
-C-fibers

26
Q

What kind of feelings do the Abeta-fibers produce?

A

-Does not produce pain (non-noxious)
-Involved with feelings of touch and pressure

27
Q

Where do Abeta-fibers innervate?

A

The skin

28
Q

Three different pain fibers ranked by fastest to slowest

A

Abeta-fibers > Adelta-fibers(first pain) > C-fibers(second pain)

29
Q

What kind of feelings do the Adelta-fibers produce?

A

-Pain and cold
-Sharp and prickly

30
Q

What kind of feelings do the C-fibers produce?

A

-Pain
-Temp
-Touch
-Pressure
-Itch
-Dull and aching

31
Q

Why do the three pain fibers differ in speed?

A

C-fibers are unmyelinated while the two A-fibers are myelinated with Abeta having a thick myelin sheathe

32
Q

What is peripheral sensitization?

A

-Repeated stimuli reduce firing threshold
-Repeated stimuli release a substance called substance P
-Substance P increases expression of pain receptors resulting in sensitization

33
Q

What effects does substance P have on the body?

A

-Vasodilation
-Degranulation of mast cells
-Release of histamine
-Inflammation and prostaglandins

34
Q

What causes sensitization of neuropathic pain?

A

Increased AMPA and NMDA expression and sensitivity in the spinal synapse

35
Q

What contributes to spontaneous dysesthesias (shooting, burning pain) in neuropathic pain sensitization?

A

-Spontaneous afferent activity
-Spinal sensitization

36
Q

What contributes to allodynia (light touch hurts) in neuropathic pain sensitization?

A

-Spinal sensitization
-Abeta afferent fibers

37
Q

What causes spontaneous afferent activity?

A

Possibly enhanced expression of sodium channel subtypes contributing to:
-Enhanced cellular excitability
-Generation of ectopic action potentials (action potentials can occur spontaneously)

38
Q

What causes spinal sensitization?

A

-Release of neuropeptides which bind to NK1 and CGRP-R
-These receptors lead to an increase in intracellular PLC which increases PKC inside the cell
-PKC increases expression of AMPA and NMDA receptors which enhances the conduction of pain

39
Q

Which pathway in the brain has a high expression of opioid receptors?

A

Descending pathway

40
Q

What are the effects of the expression of Mu opioid receptors on the brain?

A

-Alter mood
-Produce sedation
-Reduce emotional reaction

41
Q

What are the effects of the expression of Mu opioid receptors on the brainstem?

A

Increase activity of descending fibers

42
Q

What are the effects of the expression of Mu opioid receptors on the spinal cord?

A

-Inhibit vesicle release
-Hyperpolarize post-synaptic membrane

43
Q

What are the effects of the expression of Mu opioid receptors on the periphery?

A

-Reduce activation of primary afferent
-Modulate immune activity