Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Factors affecting pain perception/input

A
  • Mood: depressed, anxiety, catastrophizing
  • Chemical/structural: atrophy (happens w/ chronic pain) and opiod/DA dysfunction
  • Injury: peripheral and central sensitization
  • Genetics
  • Context: beliefs, culture, placebo, expectations
  • Cognition: attention, distraction, hypervigilance
  • Pain inhibitory center: periaqueductal gray sends messages to the thalamus that leads to profound analgesic affects
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2
Q

Generation of pain

A
  • Due to inflammatory events that lead to the formation of prostaglandins (COX2 pathway- inhibited by NSAIDs)
  • Prostaglandins sensitize skin pain receptors and makes them more prone to firing
  • Also regulates hypothalamic temperature control center
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3
Q

Types of pain

A
  • Can be chronic or acute, and nociceptive (inflammatory) or neuropathic
  • Nociceptive: protective response of body to trauma or inflammation, pain is relieved when inflammation is gone, responds to NSAIDs
  • Neuopathic: no protective purpose or biologic value, persists beyond healing, does not respond to NSAIDs
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4
Q

Factors that chronic pain influences

A
  • Non-opioid mediators
  • Endogenous opioids (placebo works on same receptors)
  • ANS
  • Respiratory center
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5
Q

Neuropathic pain

A
  • Caused by a lesion or disease of the nervous system
  • Central (stroke, MS, trauma, compression of SC, ect) or peripheral (diabetic, herpetic, etoh neuropathies, complex regional pain syndrome)
  • Most common neuropathic pains are lower back pain and diabetic neuropathy
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6
Q

Neuropathic pain Dx

A
  • Dx: spontaneous pain that’s worse at night
  • Exam: no sensory loss, may have allodynia (pain from cotton swab), hyperalgesia (exaggerated response to pain), or hyperpathia (summation of pain after repetitive stimulus)
  • Sympathetically-driven pain: ANS is in overdrive
  • Assess joints, fascia, tendons, psychology
  • Lab tests: nerve conduction studies, skin biopsy, neuroimaging (fMRI and PET)
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7
Q

Rx for nociceptive pain

A
  • NSAIDs then opiates then sedatives/anesthetics

- Rx the injury

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8
Q

Rx of neuropathic pain

A
  • Rx the biological, social and psychological problems (biopsychosocial)
  • Can use pharmacologic Rx (mostly anti epileptics, TCAs, and steroids) along w/ psychological and physical Rx
  • TCAs block Na channels, do not use opiates as they can increase neuropathic pain
  • Can also to stimulation on parts of the brain or SC
  • Goals of Rx: improve pt understanding, level of function, promote self-management, and modify their perceived level of pain
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