Physiology of pain 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Acute vs chronic pain length

A

Acute = < 3 months

Chronic = > or equal to 3 months

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2
Q

Acute pain

  • Causes
  • Mechansim
A

Causes: after surgery, MSK injury, burns

Mechanism

  • Inflammatory and nocireceptive due to tissue damage and inflammation
  • Peripheral sensitisation
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3
Q

Peripheral sensitisation in acute pain

A

Leads to hyperalgesia

Reduction in channel threshold at nociceptor ends

  • TRPV1
  • Na+ channels
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4
Q

Lidocaine

  • Type
  • Mechanism
A

Local anaesthetic-

  • Sodium channel blockers
  • Prevent nociceptor firing
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5
Q

Topical capsaicin treatment

- Mechanism + action

A

TRPV1 channel agonist
- Repeated use reduces nociceptor firing

Mechanism of action:

  • ?Depletes substance P
  • Causes peripheral terminals to die back
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6
Q

NSAIDs

  • Examples
  • Mechanism of action
A

Aspirin, Ibuprofen

Reduces the inflammatory response by Inhibiting prostaglandin synthesis

  • By blocking COX
  • Prevents peripheral sensitisation by preventing a decrease in Na+ channel threshold
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7
Q

Paracetamol/acetominophen

- Action

A

Not NSAID

Inhibits cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes 			
- But does not reduce inflammation
  • Acts on descending serotonergic pathways
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8
Q

Opioids

  • Examples
  • Mechanism
A

Examples:

  • Morphine
  • Codeine
  • Tramadol

Mechanism

  • Agonists of the endogenous opioid system
  • Brainstem = Disinhibition
  • Spinal cord
  • Peripheral = inhibit channels on nociceptors
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9
Q

Gate control theory

A

Pain stimulated by nociceptors can be reduced by simultaneous activation of low threshold mechanoreceptors
- Modulates pain at spinal cord level

  • Rubbing/ blowing pain can reduce pain sensation

A-beta fibres are stimulates near injury site

  • Actives interneurones in dorsal horn [closes gated]
  • Inhibits spinothalamic neurones
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10
Q

Chronic pain causes

A

Inflammatory
- Persistent tissue inflammation

Neuropathic
- Injury to the NS

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11
Q

Neuropathic pain peripheral mechanisms

A

Peripheral sensitisation

Spontaneous firing of nociceptors

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12
Q

Spontaneous firing of nociceptors

A

Peripheral mechanism of neuropathic pain.

  1. Peripheral nerve injury = accumulation of ion channels at regenerating tip of axon
  2. Increased axonal firing at injury site
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13
Q

Neuropathic pain central mechanisms

A

Central sensitization
– within spinal cord

Changes in activation patterns/cortical remapping
- within brain

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14
Q

Central sensitization

A

Increase in the responsiveness of nociceptive neurons within the central nervous system
- Due to reduced threshold of activation for second order neurones

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15
Q

Mechanism for reduced threshold activation in central sensitisation

A

Similar to LTP:

  1. Constant firing of axons from the periphery (following injury )= Sustained release of glutamate
  2. Prolonged depolarisation of the
    postsynaptic membrane
    = Massive influx of Ca2+ through NMDA receptors
  3. Activation of kinases
    = Phosphorylation of NMDA/AMPA receptors
  4. Channel protein synthesis
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16
Q

Central hyperalgesia

A

After central sensitisation:

- Activation of nociceptors results in amplified spinal cord activation

17
Q

Central allodynia mechanism

+ Other central sensitisation mechanism

A

After central sensitisation:
- Non-noxious A-beta fibres sensitised 2nd order neurons [normally the synapse between the fibres are non-functional]

Other mechanisms:

  • A-beta fibres form new sprouts that synapse with spinothalamic neurones
  • Loss of inhibitory interneurones
18
Q

Chronic pain treatment

A

Acute pain treatments could work

Individual patient management is important

Associated symptoms should be treated:

  • Depression
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Fatigue
19
Q

Tricyclic antidepressants

  • Example
  • Mechanism
A

Example: Amitriptyline

Mechanism:

  • Acts on descending inhibitory pathways
  • Inhibits serotonin and NADR re-uptake.
20
Q

Anticonvulsant

  • Examples
  • Mechanism
A

Examples:

  • Gabapentin
  • Carbamazepine

Mechanism:

  • Reduces spinal cord excitability
  • Gabapentin = blocks presynaptic voltage-gated calcium channels
  • Prevents glutamate release in nociceptors
  • Carbamazepine = blocks Na+ channels
21
Q

Ketamine

  • Type
  • Action
  • Side effects
A

Anaesthetic

Mechanism

  • NMDA antagonist = reduces glutamate influx
  • Prevents second order neurone depolarisation

Side effects:

  • Hallucinations
  • Nightmares
22
Q

NICE guideline for treating neuropathic pain

A
  1. Amitriptyline or pregabalin/gabapentin
  2. Switch options in first step or combine the two
  3. Referral to specialist pain service
    - Consider oral tramadol
    OR
    - Topical lidocaine in combination with second line treatment
23
Q

Placebo for treating chronic pain

A

Has be demonstrated to be successful for treating neuropathic pain

Due to activation of descending inhibitory pathways

24
Q

Complementary alternative therapies for treating chronic pain [5]

A

Acupuncture

Massage therapy

Homeopathy

Herbal medicine

Hypnosis