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Definition
Perception of pain. Depends on specific receptors & pathways. Brain needs to know about noxious stimuli faster! |
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Term
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Definition
Unspecialized nerve cell endings that start sensation of pain. Transduce many stimuli into receptor potentials which trigger afferent AP's. From cell bodies in dorsal root ganglia/trigeminal ganglion (facee), one axon to periphery & one to spinal cord/brain stem. |
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Term
Peripheral nociceptive axons |
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Definition
End in unspecialized free endings. Categorized by axon properties. Either Adelta (myelinated, 5-30m/s) or C (unmyelinated, <2m/s). Usually unmyelinated or lightly myelinated. Much slower velocities than other somatics. |
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Definition
Fast pain pathway. Responds to dangerously intense mechanical (pressure) or both intense mechanical AND thermal (pressure & heat) stimuli. Called Adelta mechanosensitive nociceptors or Adelta mechanothermal nociceptors. |
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Definition
Slow pain pathway. Respond to thermal, mechanical, and chemical stimuli (so polymodal). Called polymodal nociceptors. |
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Definition
Called first pain, Adelta responsible. |
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Term
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Definition
Called second pain. C axons responsible. |
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Term
Aalpha and Abeta give pain? |
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Definition
No, but if stimulus is enough to activate nearby Adelta nociceptors, will get tingling or if stimulus is super powerful will still get sharp pain! If stimulus goes even farther, C axons will activate and have duller, longer-lasting pain. |
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Term
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Definition
Sensitive to heat at least 45C and capsaicin. Also called VR-1 or TRPV1.
[image]
[image]
[image] |
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Term
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Definition
Higher threshold for heat, 52C. Not sensitive to capsaicin. Only in Adelta receptors. Also called VRL-1 or TRPV2. |
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Term
Transient receptor potential channels |
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Definition
TRPs. Family of receptors, including VR-1 and VRL-1. Like voltage-gated K+ channels w/ 6 transmembrane domains, pore between 5&6. Resting, closed pore. Activated & open, influx of Na+ and Ca2+ to make AP's in nociceptive fibers.
[image] |
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Term
Central Pain Pathway (body): dorsolateral, first-order |
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Definition
Originate with other sensory neurons in dorsal root ganglia. Branch into ascending and descending collaterals at dorsal horn to make dorsolateral tract of Lissauer. Run up and down for on/two spinal segments, penetrate gray matter of dorsal horn. Give branches that contact second-order neurons in Rexed's laminae 1 and 5.
[image] |
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Term
Central Pain Pathway (body): dorsolateral, second-order |
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Definition
Cross midline and ascend to brainstem and thalamus in anterolateral quadrant of contralateral half of spinal cord. Past this is anterolateral system.
[image] |
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Term
Central Pain Pathways (body): anterolateral system |
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Definition
Conveying of pain and temp info to higher centers.
[image] |
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Term
Central Pain Pathways: anterolateral, first-order & second-order |
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Definition
First-orders terminate in dorsal horn (from dorsolateral), second-order from dorsal horn send axons across midline and ascend on contralateral side of cord (anterolateral column) to thalamus and brainstem. Second-orders go to many structures in brainstem and forebrain. |
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Term
Dorsal column pain symptoms |
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Definition
Touch, pressure, vibration, proprioception. Ipsilateral. |
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Term
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Definition
Pain and temperature. Contralateral side. |
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Term
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Definition
When you have area after dorsal horn injured, lose cutaneous info on ipsilateral side and lose pain & temp on contralateral side because of how the tracts are set up. |
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Term
Sensory discriminative aspects of pain |
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Definition
Location, intensity, quality of noxious stimuli. Depend on info from VPL to SI and SII. Small, localized receptive fields. Slide 12 |
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Term
Affective-motivational aspects |
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Definition
Unpleasant feeling, fear, anxiety, autonomic activation of fight-or-flight. From VPL to subdivisions of reticular formation, deep layers of superior colluculus, central gray, hypothalamus, amygdala, midline thalamic nuclei )important for transmitting nociceptive signals to anterior cingulate cortex and insula).
Slide 16.
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Term
Pain & Temp Pathways from Face: first-order |
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Definition
Neurons in trigeminal ganglion and from ganglia associated w/ cranial nerves VII, IX and X.
[image]
Descend to medulla and make spinal trigeminal tract. Terminate into two subdivisions, pars interpolaris and pars caudalis.
[image] |
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Term
Pain and Temp from Face: second-order |
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Definition
Neurons cross midline and terminate in many targets of brainstem and thalamus. Targets grouped into mediating affective/motivational aspects and that mediate discriminative aspects (like body).
Discriminative: projections to contralateral VPM, from VPM, SI, and SII.
Affective: to targets in reticular formation and midbrain, midline nuclei of thalamus which supply cingulate and insular regions of cortex.
[image] [image] |
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Term
Other reasons for anterolateral system |
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Definition
Important for transmitting innocuous info to higher centers. W/o dorsal column system, can mediate nondiscriminative touch. Mediates innocuous temp sensation, to higher centers by secondary neurons in lamina 1.
[image]
[image]
[image] |
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Term
Innocuous temp fibers & channels |
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Definition
Warm fibers respond w/ increasing spike discharge rates to increases in temp.
Cold fibers respond w/ increasing spike discharge rates to decreases in temp.
TRP channels respond: TRPV3 and TRPV4 respond to warm, TRPM8 responds to cold. |
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Term
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Definition
Many distinct classes of selective neurons for noxious & innocuous types of info from anterolateral. Sensitive to first pain, second pain, innocuous warmth, innocuous cold, histamine (mediating itch), slow mechanical stimulation (sensual touch), class that senses lactic acid & metabolites released by muscle contraction. |
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Term
Class that senses lactic acid & metabolites |
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Definition
Maybe responsible for representing physiological condition of body (interoception). |
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Term
Interoception vs. exteroception |
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Definition
Intero: drives mechanisms for homeostasis.
Extero: touch and pressure. |
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Term
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Definition
After painful stimulus w/ tissue damage, stimuli in & around injury feel much more painful. |
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Term
Peripheral sensitization (hyperalgesia) |
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Definition
Interaction of nociceptors w/ substances released when tissue damaged. Interact with receptors or ion channels of nociceptive fibers and change responses.
Slide 23 & 22 |
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Term
Central sensitization (allodynia) |
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Definition
Immediate-onset, activity-dependent increase in excitability or neurons in dorsal horn after high activity of nociceptive receptors. Nerves that couldn't make AP's now make AP's and increase pain sensitivity. From transcription-dependent and transcription-independent processes.
Slide 24 |
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Term
Transcription-independent allodynia |
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Definition
"Windup" - progressive increase in discharge rate of dorsal horn neurons from low-frequency activation of nociceptors. Stimulation constant amount, but feeling of intensity increases with each stimulation. Only during period of stimulation. Depolarization from activation of voltage-dependent calcium channels and removal of Mg in NMDA receptors, increasing sensitivity of dorsal horn to glutamate.
Slide 24 |
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Term
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Definition
Thought to involve LTP-like enhancements of postsynaptic potentials. Longest-lasting from transcription-dependent processes or from changes in neuronal activity (at site of injury)/humoral signals (more widespread changes). |
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Term
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Definition
From afferent fibers or central pathways themselves being damaged. Persistent sensitizations. |
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Term
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Definition
From internal organs. Balloon-intestine experiment. |
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Term
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Definition
Feel pain in some other part than where the pain is actually sensed (arm pain during heart attack). Currents activate arm/shoulder nerves which are very close to heart nerves and cause pain. |
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Term
Descending pain-modulating pathways |
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Definition
Start in somatosensory cortex (to thalamus) and hypothalamus, thalamus to midbrain where thalmic neurons synapse with ascending pathways in medulla and spinal cord and get pain relief. Somewhat from opioid neurotrans. http://static.howstuffworks.com/gif/pain-1.gif |
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Term
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Definition
Physiological response after receiving treatment w/o drug (but thinking there is a drug in the treatment). Less response of pain receptors, and if opioid receptors blocked still have pain!
Mostly from central modulation. |
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Term
Other places where pain-modulating pathways start |
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Definition
Many brainstem sites like parabrachial nucleus, dorsal raphe, locus coeruleus, and medullary reticular formation. Fig. 10.8 |
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