06-01: Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of Pain

A
  • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage
  • Warning sign for potential tissue damage
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2
Q

Categories of Pain (2)

A
  • Acute

- Chronic

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3
Q

Acute Pain

A
  • Lasts less than 6 weeks
  • Lasts as long as noxious stimulus exists
  • Sub-acute pain lasts between 7-12 weeks
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4
Q

Chronic Pain

A
  • Lasts beyond time of healing: > 12 weeks
  • Activation of abnormal neurological responses
  • Lasts after stimulus ceases
  • Associated with physical, psychological, social dysfunction
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5
Q

Healing process of pain (12 weeks)

A
  • Full 12 weeks to heal
  • 50% at 2 weeks
  • 80% at 6 weeks
  • 100% at 12 weeks
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6
Q

Types of pain (4)

A
  • Referred
  • Trigger Points
  • Radiating Pain
  • Sclerotomes
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7
Q

Referred Pain

A
  • Experience pain in one area, but the injury is in another area
  • Can refer joint-to-joint
  • Most common joint-to-joint: hip-to-knee
  • Can refer from peripheral nerve to its distal intervention (Radiating pain)
  • Can refer from an organ to outside tissues
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8
Q

Trigger Points

A

Hyperirritable area of muscle that, when activated, becomes painful and may refer pain to areas that follow a specific pattern associated with a particular point.

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9
Q

Radiating Pain

A
  • Pain caused by irritation of nerves and nerve roots
  • Ex: Sciatic Nerve: Pain from sciatica radiates from the buttock down the leg and can travel as far as the feet and toes
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10
Q

Sclerotomes

A
  • Deep somatic pain
  • A segment of bone that is innervated by a spinal segment
  • Similar to dermatomes
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11
Q

Pain Assessment (4)

A
  • Visual Analogue Scale
  • Numeric Scale
  • Pain Charts
  • Questionnaires (Ostwestry, McGill, Dallas, Rowland Morris LBP)
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12
Q

Goals of Therapy

A
  • Directed toward reducing pain
  • Pain can inhibit pt’s ability to function, prevent participation in therex, cause other complications
  • PTs/PTAs encourage body to heal using movement (therex)
  • Modatlities can assist in reducing pain; allows a quicker return to function
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13
Q

Pain Descriptors

A
  • Gives better idea of what causes pain: jt, tissue, muscle

- Ex: sharp, dull, throbbing, stinging, achting, burning, localized, generalized

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14
Q

Sensory Receptors

A

Sensory nerve ending designed to detect various stimuli

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15
Q

Meissner’s Corpuscles

A

Light Touch

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16
Q

Pacinian Corpuscles

A

Deep Pressure

17
Q

Merkel’s Corpuscles

A

Slow response to deep pressure (ex: hair follicle activity controls as depressed, pushed on)

18
Q

Ruffini Corpuscles

A

Skin - touch, tension, heat

Can detect change in posiiton (joint)

19
Q

Krause’s End Bulbs

A

React to decrease in temperature and touch

20
Q

Nociceptors

A

Respond to noxious stimuli, tissue damage

21
Q

Endogenous Opioids

A
  • Opiate-like neuroactive peptide substances made by the body
  • Produced and released when we experience pain
  • Released by nerves traveling from brain to spinal cord
  • Have analgesic properties
  • Block the passage of noxious stiimuli
  • Reduces sense of pain
22
Q

Types of Endongenous Opioids (2)

A
  • Endorphins and Enkephalins

- Enkephalins inhibit depolarization of nociceptor nerve fibers

23
Q

Neural transmission of pain

A

Sensory receptors –> Afferent fibers (towards brain) –> Dorsal horn of spinal cord –> Brain –> Efferent fibers (away from brain) –> Motor response

24
Q

Neurotransmitters

A

Substances that pass info from one neuron to another

25
Q

Gate Theory of Pain: Ascending

A
  • Stimulus –> Dorsal horn of spinal cord –> Pain message encounters “nerve gate”
  • Stimulates fibers so pain fibers blocked; can potentially shut gate
  • Short term (as long as stimulus exists)
26
Q

Open Gate (Gate Theory)

A

Pain message gets through –> pain is received

27
Q

Closed Gate (Gate Theory)

A

Pain message doesn’t reach brain –> no pain is received

28
Q

Gate Theory (Thin, Thick fibers)

A
  • Pain travels over smaller, thin fibers (“C” fibers)
  • Touch, pressure, vibration, movement travels over large thick fibers (A Beta Fibers) - stimulate sensation to inhibit feeling of pain
  • Both fibers act on the inhibitory neuron - thin inhibits, thick stimulates
  • Movement also stimulates enkephalin release