Physiology and Pathophysiology of Pain Flashcards

1
Q

What is nociception?

A

Detection of tissue damage by specialized transducers connected to A(delta) and C fibres

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2
Q

Where are the cell bodies of primary afferent nerves located? Where do these nerves synapse?

A

Cell bodies in the dorsal root ganglion

Synapse at the spinal cord

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3
Q

Which nerve fibres are responsible for detecting fast/sharp pain? Which fibres sense secondary slow/dull pain? Why?

A
  • A(delta) fibres detect first/sharp pain because they are myelinated with medium diameter
  • C fibres detect slow/dull pain because they are unmyelinated with small diameter
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4
Q

Cell bodies of spinothalamic tract neurones mostly located in which rexed lamina? What is a rexed lamina?

A

rexed lamina 1, 2 & 5

Rexed laminae is a system of labelling portions of grey matter in the SC according to their cellular composition. Similar to Brodmann areas

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5
Q

Which nuclei of the thalamus is involved in the relay of nociceptive information?

A

Ventroposterior thalamic nuclei and the medial dorsal nucleus

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6
Q

To what parts of the brain does the thalamus relay pain information?

A
  • Cortex
  • Limbic System
  • Brainstem
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7
Q

What is the primary control centre for descending pain modulation?

A

PAG

Periaqueductal grey matter (located around the cerebral aqueduct)

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8
Q

What is hyperalgesia and when does it occur?

A

It is increased perception of pain or even perception of non-noxious stimuli as noxious

Occurs whenever there is tissue injury or inflammation

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9
Q

Difference between primary and secondary hyperalgasia?

A

Primary: hyperalgesia at the site of injury

Secondary: hyperalgesia in the surrounding tissue

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10
Q

What is allodynia?

A

Reduction in the threshold at which stimuli becomes noxious, often following non-painful stimulation

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11
Q

Examples of peripheral sensitization?

A
  • Allodynia: reduced threshold
  • Hyperalgesia: exaggerated responses
  • Spontaneous pain: often without stimuli
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12
Q

What is central sensitization?

A

When the second order neurones in the CNS start inputting noxious and non-noxious stimuli as pain

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13
Q

3 Main components of central sensitization?

A
  • Wind up
  • Classical
  • Long-term potentiation
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14
Q

What is wind up? When does it manifest?

A

Winding up the response to input

Smaller inputs create larger responses due to wound up system, manifests over the course of the stimulus and terminates with the stimulus

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15
Q

What is classical central sensitization? How long does it last in relation to the activating stimulus?

A
  • New synapses are opened up in the dorsal horn, only respond to significant stimuli
  • When significant stimuli activates new pathways, pain response tends to outlast the stimuli and can be maintained at even low levels of ongoing stimuli
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16
Q

How is long term potentiation central sensitization activated?

A
  • Involves mainly the activated synapses, occurs primarily for very intense stimuli
17
Q

Differences between segmental and suprasegmental central sensitization?

A

Segmental - nerve injury in SC, pain response is segmented/localized

Suprasegmental - nerve injury in brain, pain is felt all over the body (fibromyalgia/chronic widespread pain)

18
Q

Differences between acute and chronic pain?

A
  • Acute lasts for <1 month, chronic for >3-6 months
  • Acute pain resolves upon healing
  • Chronic pain doesn’t usually serve a protective function like acute pain
  • Acute pain occurs in presence of noxious stimuli, chronic pain doesn’t require stimuli
19
Q

What is nociceptive pain?

A

Sensory experience in response to specific peripheral sensory neurones respond to noxious stimuli

20
Q

Can nociceptive pain be chronic?

A
  • Usually time limited and resolves

- Can be chronic, but still in response to valid stimuli (eg. osteoarthritis)

21
Q

What is neuropathic pain?

A

Pain caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the somato-sensory nervous system

Usually chronic, painful region may not be the same as site of injury

22
Q

How do neuropathic and nociceptive pain tend to respond to analgesics?

A
  • Nociceptive tends to respond to conventional analgesics

- Neuropathic does not

23
Q

Four phases at which you can attempt to treat pain?

A
  • Transduction (NSAIDS/Ice)
  • Transmission (opiods/surgery)
  • Perception (Behavioural therapy)
  • Descending modulation (opiods/spinal cord stimulation)
24
Q

What is a cordotomy?

A
  • Surgical procedure that disables selected pain conducting tracts in the spinal cord

(stops pain at transmission stage)