Lecture 6- Nociception and pain 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Transduction

A
  • Process of creating an electrical signal from a physical stimulus
  • Activation of receptors allows ions to pass across nerve cell membrane
  • Ion channel response&raquo_space; influx + ions&raquo_space; electrical charge across membrane&raquo_space; if > threshold&raquo_space; action potential
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2
Q

Afferent nerves

A
•	A-beta:
o	Light touch and vibration
o	Fast conducting (myelinated)
o	Low stim threshold
•	A-delta and C:
o	Noxious stim
o	Slower (thinly or unmyelinated)
o	High stim threshold
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3
Q

Somatosensory pathways

A
  • Dorsal column of SC = discrim touch and proprioception

* Anterolateral = discrim info pain, temp and course touch

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4
Q

Nociceptors (1st order neurons)

A
•	A-delta
o	Thinly myelinated
o	Polymodal- Thermal, mechanical and chemical
o	First or fast pain- sharp or pricking
•	C
o	Unmyelinated
o	Polymodal
o	Prolonged burning or dull pain- second or slow
•	Silent nociceptors
o	Active when tissue damaged or inflamed
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5
Q

Spinothalamic pathway

A
  • Fast pain- sharp, localising
  • Lateral system
  • Conscious relay to sensory cortex
  • Primary neurotrans = glutamate
  • A-delta synapse dorsal horn
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6
Q

Spinolimbic/ spinoreticular/ spinomesencephelic pathways

A
  • Slow pain- dull, throbbing, poorly localised
  • Medial system
  • Transmit info extent of injury and bodies response
  • Primary neurotrans = substance P
  • C synapse interneurons in dorsal horn
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7
Q

Medial pain system

A
  • Spinomesencephalic- head turning to noxious source, activates descending tracts that modulate pain (automatic movements and withdrawal)
  • Spinoreticular- arousal, attention, sleep/awake cycles
  • Spinolimbic- affective dimensions of pain
  • Integration of noci + homeostatic and autonomic processes
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8
Q

Peripheral sensation

A
  1. A-delta or C activation
  2. Presence of inflammatory mediators
  3. Sensitisation of peripheral nociceptors- more overall nociception activation
  4. Recruitment of dormant multimodal nociceptors- due to exposure to inflam soup
  5. Repeated nociceptive stimulation- release of substance P and CGRP, further stims inflam process
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9
Q

Hyperalgesia

A
  • experiencing more pain than stimulus should generate
  • peripheral sensation = primary
  • central = secondary
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10
Q

Central sensitisation

A
  • enlargement of receptive fields
  • increase responses to >threshold stim (hyperalgesia)
  • possible development of spontaneous activity (neurogenic pain)
  • reduction threshold for activation from periph stim (hyperal)
  • enhanced function of noci pathway neurons
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11
Q

Wind-up

A
  • barrage nociceptive input onto 2nd order neuron in DH leads to prolonged discharge
  • can’t repol before next stim
  • progressive increase in number of action potentials evoked by stim
  • activation of NMDA receptor
  • repetitive wind-up = long-term increase in synaptic transmission efficacy = long-term potentiation
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12
Q

Allodynia due to central sensitisation issues

A

• physical changes occur in DH:
o death inhib neurons
o sprouting of A-beta terminals where normally only A-delta or C are
o conversion wide dynamic range neurons- respond to noxious and innocuous stim
o novel synapses between A-beta and central noci neurons
• result:
o additional/amplified noci info = secondary hyperalgesia
o innocuous aff may stim noci = allodynia

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