Term
What is a
Physical Agent? |
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Definition
* Application of a force or substance/device that causes change.
*The change we would like to produce is progression thru the rehab process (processing you to a more healthy state).
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Term
PA that we provide
in physical therapy setting?
The should __________. |
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Definition
"bells and whistles"
*Help the PT Rx
*Facilitate progression thru the rehab process.
*Should always have specific purpose and goal.
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Term
Responsibilites for
use of PA. |
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Definition
*APTA and MO practice act. Guidelines for specific use of PA.
*General knowledge necessary for application of PA. (potential for harmful side effects. |
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Term
W/O documentation which justifies the necessity of the exclusive use of PA/modalities __________. |
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Definition
The use of PA/modalities in the absence of other skilled therapeutic or edu intervention should not be considered P.T. |
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Term
A modality is
administered along with
_______________. |
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Definition
other important PT interventions in order
to make them successful. |
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Term
Along with a PA
Also Provide__________. |
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Definition
*pt edu
*Adjunctive therapies
- Flexibility
-Strengthening
-Balance
- Supportive therapies (taping or assist devices)
* Data Collection to determine effectiveness
*Documentation of agent parameters and outcomes |
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Term
Considerations when using a
PA? |
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Definition
*Indications, Contraindications, Precautions
*Always relative to the situation
* Effects (normal, abdnormal, adverse)
*Impaired sensation (goal of Rx?)
*Impaired mentation (pt expectations?)
*Comm barrier (pt expectations?) |
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Term
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Definition
*Thermal - Heat/Cold (Superficial/Deep)
*Mechanical (Traction/Compression)
*Electromagnetic
*Electrical |
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Term
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Definition
*Modify inflammation and healing
*Relieve Pain
*Alter collagen extensibility
*Modify muscle tone |
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Term
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Definition
*Heat - increased bld flow and local metab
*Redness - increased bld flow
*Swelling - blocked lymphatics
*Pain - chemical irritation and pressure (jt splinting and muscle inhibition)
*Loss of fxn - from pain and swelling |
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Term
The right modalities at the right time can help
________. |
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Definition
accelerate and facilitate progress into and through
the rehabilitation process. |
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Term
Phases: Inflammation
and Repair |
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Definition
Inflammation: 1-6 days
Proliferation: 3-20 days
Maturation: 9 days on to
nLongest phase:
n can go on longer than a year after insult
(If you are having problems in your immune systems, may skip phases) |
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Term
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Definition
the application of shortwave or microwave electromagnetic energy
to produce heat w/in tissues, particularly deep tissues |
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Term
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Definition
therapeutic application of cold
*used to decrease circulation, metabolic rate, or pain. |
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Term
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Definition
therapeutic application of heat
*used to increase circulation, metabolic rate, and soft tissue extensibility or to decrease pain. |
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Term
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Definition
(has both thermal and nonthermal effects)
sound w/in a frequency of greater than 20,000 cycles/seconds. |
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Term
*Continuous ultrasound _________.
*Pulsed ultrasound ___________. |
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Definition
*used to heat deep tissues to increase circulation, metabolic rate, and soft tissue extensibility, and decrease pain.
*used to facilitate tissue healing or promote transdermal drug penetration by nonthermal mechanisms. |
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Term
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Definition
*transfer energy to a pt to produce an increase or decrease in tissue temp.
(Ex: hot packs, ice packs, ultrasound, whirlpool, diathermy) |
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Term
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Definition
* apply force to increase or decrease pressure on the body.
(Ex: water, traction, compression, and sound) |
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Term
Progression of inflammation and
Repair |
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Definition
*Pathological or Physical insult
- Inflammation phase
- Vasoconstriction
- Vasodilation
- Clot Formation
- Phagocytosis
- Proliferation Phase
- Epithelialization
- Fibroplasia/Collagen Production
- Wound Contracture
- Neovascularization - new vessels form where the old ones broke.
- Maturation Phase
- Collagen Synthesis/Lysis Balance
- Collagen Fiber Orientation
- Healed injury |
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Term
Consider a sprained ankle.
Inflammation is normal in this situation.
Do we wants to interfere?
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Definition
Not always good for tissues, but this can make patient more comfortable.
Need to decide why to interfere, how much, how long, and in what ways?
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Term
During the Inflammation phase
there are symptoms?
(1-6 days) |
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Definition
*Increase bld flow, Increase temp, redness, pain, limping, swelling
(over stretch muscle, ligament, disrupted blood vessels and neurologic structures, parts of the injured site have been impinged.) |
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Term
During the inflammation phase...
(2-5)
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Definition
2. ↑blood vessel permeability
3. vasodialation of non-injured vessels
4. Fluid into interstitial space
5. Disrupted vessels bleed and transiently constrict to control bleeding (mediated by norepi for about 5-10 min)
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Term
During the inflammation phase ?
*Prostoglandins _________.
*Intracellular chemicals ___________
*Histamine __________.
*Leukocytes __________. |
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Definition
*produced by mast cells 2ndary to cell membrane rupture.
*from disrupted cells released into surrounding tissues.
*released by mast cells, platelets, and basophils for about another hour causing continued swelling.
*line vessel walls to get ready to exit to the interstitial space for clean up. |
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Term
Types of Inflammation
*also be aware of reduced or impaired inflammation - a inflammation that is slow to response, (could be older, malnutritous, chronic injury)
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Definition
nAcute = 2 wks (
nSubacute = >4 weeks
nChronic = months à yrs (this is a problem)
nThis situation results in excess fibroblasts and collagen.
n↑ scar and possible adhesions.
nBalance between optimal strength and mobility is lost.
nAltered immune response ( implant or disease)
nPersistent injury
Interference with normal healing (cumulative trauma) |
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Term
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Definition
*Problematic
*Progression of inflammation, tissue destruction, and impaired tissue healing
*Inadequate progression into the healing phase |
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Term
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Definition
*Very Individual
*Clinicians must be sensitive to the pain of their pts
*A subjective situation that we attempt to objectify.
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Term
Need the right amount of inflammation to start the healing process.
May use ice for ________. |
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Definition
*for pain, but don't want to lose right amt
of inflammation. Let it get inflammed and allow pt to
rest.
(sometimes PT will want to reduced inflammation, and sometimes they may want to produce it) |
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Term
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Definition
nOccurs secondary to injury, noxious stim, or disease.
nIntensity and location related to area and degree of tissue damage.
nLocalized and defined.
nHas sympathetic (SNS) component: BP, HR, muscle tone, sweating, breathing, or vaso-vagal response.
nMeaningful, useful, and time limited.
nProtective –limits activity |
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Term
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Definition
nStarts as acute
nDoesn’t leave when the injury is healing
nContinues well beyond noxious(harmful) stimulation
nUsually longer than 3-6 months
nTissue pathology is often not identifiable any longer.
nAssoc w/ physical, psychological, and social dysfunction – depression common
nSpecific chronic pain programs address all of these issues. |
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Term
Chronic pain may result from a __________. |
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Definition
*change in the SNS and adrenal activity. (chronic pain may have more than one cause)
-results in decreased enkephalins and increased sensitivity or nociceptors.
-vital signs important!!!!
*Clinician may not be able to eliminate chronic pain.
-Esp if sympathetic changes have occurred
-Measure pain control in terms of fxn. (if pt tells you, I am 25, you say, pt reports pain level 25 out of scale of 0 to 10. |
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Term
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Definition
nPain experienced distant to site of insult
nCan be close to or far from the site of injury
nCan be one joint away or even to a different tissue (organ à musculoskeletal tissue) |
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Term
Referred Pain is carried _______________. |
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Definition
nFrom one nerve area to point of innervation
nFrom area differentiated from the same embryonic segment – b/c of similar area of origin in initial development
nDerived from same dermatome |
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Term
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Definition
*increase RR
*increased HR
*increased BP
*or maybe vaso-vagal response (BP and HR Drops, pt may pass out) |
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Term
Needed for a good clinican dx of referred
pain................... |
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Definition
nRx for cause of pain will get you better results in most cases than treating resultant pain.
nPatients don’t understand this and need good education from the practitioner!!
nExplain why you do pain provoking tests and why you treat the areas of the body you treat!!!! |
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Term
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Definition
nThe painful part is non existent.
nImproved sensation of the existing body parts can eliminate pain of the non existent part.
nPhysical agents can aide in improved sensitivity of existent parts.
nRequires patient’s thoughtful attention to the intervention. |
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Term
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Definition
*Everybody is capable of using psychology.
nThere may be specific motivations for pain responses.
nSometimes pain responses are inconsistent with the actual problem.
nNote inconsistencies.
nThis helps determine the area to be treated. |
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Term
Knowing whether a pt's pain is acute,
chronic, or referred will _________. |
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Definition
help the clinician determine the mechanisms and processes that may be contributing to the sensation and facilitate selection of the most appropriate treatment to control or relieve this symptom. |
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Term
Neuropathic pain is the result of ___________. |
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Definition
peripheral or CNS dysfunction w/o ongoing tissue damage.
seen in diabetic neuropathy, postherapetic neuralgia, and phantom pain limbs. |
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Term
Changes in chronic pain perception may in part be the result of a process known as wind-up, or central sensitization, in which ___________. |
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Definition
the pathways that transmit pain continue to discharge after the discontinuation of intense or repeated stimulation.
Then, even a small additional stimulus exceeds the threshold that is percieved as painful. |
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Term
Although you may suspect a pt is using chronic pain for secondary gain, it's still important to note __________. |
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Definition
this attitude may obstruct a pt's adjustment to chronic pain, prolong sick leave, and hinder rehab. |
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Term
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Definition
There are specific nerve endings for each sensation.
heat
cold
pressure
pain
Free nerve endings in the skin sense pain. |
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Term
Common referral patterns from internal organs to Muscloskeletal tissue include __________________. |
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Definition
pain asso. w/ myocardial infarction or angina caused by cardiac ischemia that is felt in the upper chest, left sh, jaw, and arm. |
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Term
Common Referred pain can be pain originating from the central portion of the diaphragm that is freq felt ________.
The gallbladder also freq refers pain to __________.
Spleen refers pain to the __________. |
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Definition
lat tip of each shoulder.
the right shoulder or inf angle of right scapula
left shoulder |
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Term
In referred pain the peripheral neural pathways from these different area _____________. |
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Definition
converge on the same or similar are of the spinal cord and synapse w/ the same second-order neurons to ascend the spinal cord and reach the central cortex. |
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Term
What can we use
to decrease or eliminate phantom pain? |
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Definition
Physical Agents: Heat, Cold, Touch,
Compression. To change their sensory map.
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Term
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Definition
*Increased intensity or frequency of stimulation of a receptor to sense any sensation can result in pain.
nPressure too much / too freq = pain
nHeat too much / too freq = pain
nCold too much / too freq = pain
nUses theory of spatial and temporal (freq in time) summation (intensity) of impulses to create pain from different sensations. |
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Term
Gate Control
Theory of Pain |
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Definition
nSecond order neurons in the dorsal horn of the SC (T cells , interneurons)
nCentral pathway input.
nKey connection in central processing
nExcitatory
nInhibitory
nDetermines weather or not pain is perceived.
nPresynaptic inhibition of pain by inputs from non-nociceptor afferents is pain gating.
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Term
Pain Gating
A- beta nerves are inhibitory and respond to non
painful stimuli to influence ___________. |
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Definition
* the interneuron in the substantia gelatinosa
large diam
meylinated
low threshold (of pain with something like cold) |
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Term
C fibers _________
(pain transmitted by these fibers have slow onset after the initial painful stimulus, are long-lasting, emotionally difficult to tolerate, and tend to be diffusely localized.) |
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Definition
small unmyelinated nerve fibers that transmit action potentials quite slowly. They respond to noxious levels of mechanical, thermal, and chemical stimulation, causing pain that is generally decribed as dull, throbbing, aching, burning. May also be reported as tingling or tapping. |
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Term
C fibers can be accompanied by autonomic
responses such as ______________. |
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Definition
sweating, increased HR, increased BP, or
nausea. The pain asso w/ C-fiber activation
can be reduced by opiates. |
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Term
A-delta fibers _________.
(sensation asso with this fiber activity are sharp, stabbing, or prickling) |
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Definition
transmit more rapidly that C fibers b/c they are myelinated.
The are most sensitive to high intensity mechanical stimulation, however they can also respond to stimulation by heat or cold and are capable or transmitting innocuous info. |
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Term
Pain sensations transmitted by A-delta
fibers have a ______________. |
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Definition
*quick onset after the painful stimulus,
*last only for a short time,
*are generally localized to the area from which the stimulus arose
* are not generally associated w/ emotional involvment.
*Generally not blocked by opiates. |
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Term
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Definition
1. Peripheral first order C fibers and A-delta fibers from peripheral to grey matter.
2. C and A-delta fibers synapse, either directly or via interneurons, w/ second-order neurons in the superficial dorsal horn or the grey matter (the substantia gelatinosa)
3.The interneurons in the dorsal horn are known as transmission cells(T cells)
4. T cells make locate connections w/in the spinal cord.
5. Inhibitory interneurons in the substantia gelatinosa are activated by input from large-diameter, myelinated, low - thershold sensory neurons (primarily A-beta nerves) that respond to non painful stimuli.
6. These inhibitory interneurons release various neurotransmitters, including norepinephrine, serotinin, and enkephalins to modulate the flow of the afferent pathways.
7. Thus the T cells recieve excitatory input from the C fibers and A-delta nocieptor afferents and inhibitory input from large diameter, nonnociceptor sensory afferents and from descending fibers from higher brain centers. |
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Term
The balance of these excitatory and
inhibitory inputs influences whether _______________. |
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Definition
the individual feels pain and how severe the pain sensation is. |
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Term
An example of
specificity theory |
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Definition
nerve fibers that response to heat will always transmit the sensation of heat and not pain, no matter how intensely or frequently it is stimulated
similarly, pain fibers will only transmit a sensation of pain and never a sensation of heat
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Term
An example of
Pattern Theory |
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Definition
nerve transmit the sensation of heat when stimulated lightly, but the same nerve may transmit pain when stimulated intensely.
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Term
Interneuron lives ___________ |
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Definition
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Term
Current Ideas
of Pain
nCombination of specificity/pattern/gate control. |
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Definition
nSpecific pain fibers – nociceptors
n50% of sensory fibers have pain function
nQuality of pain depends on the tissue stimulated. |
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Term
We are inhibiting excition of pain by _____________.
We are going to inhibit some pain b/c _____________.
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Definition
exciting excition of cold.
we are going to provide a different sensation for the brain. (we are slowing the ability of the brain to process pain.
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Term
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Definition
nMechanical Stimulation
nThermal Stimulation
nChemical Stimulation
nInternally by dysfunction: tissue, structural, chemical.
(inflammation can make all of these types of pain) |
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Term
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Definition
** nociceptor activation communicates w/ T-cells which communicate with anterior horn cells to cause muscle contraction.
nOngoing contraction causes accumulation of metabolites causing further tissue pain and irritation.
nOngoing contraction impairs blood flow-ischemia.
nInterruption of this cycle at any point (pain or spasm) can eliminate dysfunction. |
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Term
SNS contribution
Autonomic response to pain __________
Startle or emotion _____________.
Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy/Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (RSD/CRPS) |
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Definition
nAutonomic response to pain – BP, HR, sweating, cutaneous blood vessel constriction (might be pale)
nStartle or emotion can exacerbate pain sensation in time or intensity
n(RSD/CRPS) Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy / Complex Regional Pain Syndrome- skin atrophy, hyperhidrosis (excessive sweating), edema, stiffness, impaired hair growth, regional osteoporosis. |
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Term
Endogenous
Opioids
(Pain Killers produced w/in our bodies)
(Endorphin) |
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Definition
nCNS has specific opiate binding sites and production centers for opiopeptins (endorphins). These peptides bind with specific receptors sites to control pain.
nBrain periaqueductal gray matter
nDorsal horn of the SC
nPeripheral nerve endings
nWhen placed under certain stresses increased levels of endorphins allows an increased pain threshold.
nLimbic system (Mood) tie may affect pain to ▲or ▼ the response. |
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Term
What component of a m. cell can we trigger by providing a quick stretch to the muscle? |
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Definition
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Term
What are we facilitating by stretching slowly (mechanical traction)? |
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Definition
Golgi tendon organ
(GTO)
-we could stimulate mechanical with stretch and cold at same time. |
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Term
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Definition
patient who have an injury, they have change is SNS, it doesn't work normally anymore in the extremitiy in which the injury occurs (usually doesn't happen right away) |
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Term
Physical Agent
Will ___________. |
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Definition
nIntervene with pain
nAide in cellular change to promote healing
nIntervene with inflammation
nFacilitates physiologic progression through rehab process
nRequire patient education and compliance to be successful |
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Term
On Going pain, does pt have other issues in their life that could be making your pain worse? |
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Definition
if so, document what pt tells you and state that pts family sitution could be contributing to the current processing of pain. (may have to referr this pt to the kind of support they need) |
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