Pain Flashcards

1
Q

chronic pain is considered to be pain persisting for what duration of time?

A

more than 3 months

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2
Q

In the pathway of nociception, most nociceptor cell bodies for somatic and visceral sensation are located in the [….], however those for migraine & tooth jaw pain are located in the [….]

A

dorsal root ganglion

trigeminal root ganglion

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3
Q

nociceptors are specialized somatosensory because they have [….] nerve endings. Stimuli are sensed via [….] and A{beta/sigma) fibres.

A

free

C-fibres

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4
Q

C-fibres are very thin, and [….] causing them to transmit very slowly. A{beta/sigma) fibres are less slightly thicker than C-fibres but are […..] allowing for very quick transmission.

A

unmyelinated

myelinated

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5
Q

type IIA fibres are suited to convey information related to [….] pain, wheres C fibres are suited to convey information about […] pain. A mix of Type IIA and C fibres tend to be found in […] skin, where type C fibres only would be found in [….] type skin.

A

sharp

slow, burning

hairy (ie. back of the hand

glabrous (ie. palm of the hand)

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6
Q

In terms of first and second pain, which fibres are suited to each phase?

A

C-fibres are second pain (dull, continuous throbbing)

A-fibres are first pain (sharp, intense localized)

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7
Q

in nociceptive pain the intensity of the signal is [….] to the intensity of the stimulus. It is [adaptive], in that it protects by signalling potential tissue damage.

A

proportional

adaptive

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8
Q

inflammatory pain, caused by inflammatory mediators and tissue damage, has special receptors catered to […..] with the aim of reducing damage and promoting recovery.

A

adaptive, low threshold pain

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9
Q

[…..] is a nociceptive transducer for noxious stimuli (pH, heat, reactive chemicals, environmental cold, and cold hyperalgesia).

A

TRPV (transient receptor potential channel V)

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10
Q

[…..] describes a painful response to a normally innocuous stimulus

A

allodynia

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11
Q

[…]describes an increased response to normally painful stimulus

A

hyperalgesia

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12
Q

projections of sensory terminals run up and down the spine, not just to the cortex, this causes enlargement of the area that feels painful well beyond the site of injury—> this is called [….]

A

secondary hyperalgesia

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13
Q

maladaptive pain may stem from either

1) [….], where there is a neural lesion present causing positive and negative symptoms (peripheral and CNS dysfunction)
2) […..] where there is typically no lesion, no inflammation, and positive symptoms (CNS dysfunction)

A

neuropathic pain

dysfunctional pain

both produce maladaptive, low threshold pain

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14
Q

[…..] may be caused by a PNS lesion or disease (nerve trauma, peripheral and toxic neuropathies, herpes zoster, aids) producing amplification of pain persisting independant of the lesion/disease

A

peripheral amplification

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15
Q

which cortical areas are involved in the psychological modulation of pain?

A

ACC (anterior cingulate), PFC (pre-frontal), and Insula

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16
Q

mechanism of top down modulation of pain?

A

ACC and PFC signal the PAG (periaqueductal gray nucleus)
PAG is also stimulated by the insula.

PAG signals down to RVM (rostral ventromedial medulla)———–>which modulates a pain transmission neuron in the spinal cord

17
Q

the signals the body sends from an injury site are termed [..]. These signals only becomes experienced as pain when they reach the [….] and the person interprets them as pain. That experience is influenced by many factors including, […..]

A

nociceptive signalling.

conscious brain/cortex

past experience, belief, and the situation.

18
Q

T/F: a withdrawal reflex may results in response to a noxious stimulus even in absence of “pain”.

A

TRUE