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Definition
unmyelinated nociceptive neuron that responds to mechanical thermal and chemical stimulation |
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silent or sleepy nociceptors |
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Definition
normally unresponsive to noxious stimuli but become active when the tissue they innervate becomes inflamed |
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Definition
initial sensation of sharp pain, A delta afferents |
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Definition
comes a second or two after the painful event, diffuse, poorly localized, long lasting, causes more suffering, C fibers |
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Term
substances that cause inflammation |
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Definition
potassium, peptides (bradykinin and substance P), serotonin, histamine, prostaglandins --> cause leaking of fluid from vessles, dilation of blood vessles, increased activity in nociceptors |
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Term
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Definition
rubor (red) tumor (swelling) dolor (pain) calor (heat) |
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Term
zone of primary hyperalgesia |
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Definition
area around injured site that has a lowered pain threshold because of activity of sleepy nociceptors |
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Definition
when skin temp rises above 45 C the cold receptors become active again too |
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Definition
when certain internal organs are damaged, the pain is often felt somewhere else |
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Definition
other pain - normally innocuous stimuli cuase pain, or when pain occurs away from area actually stimulated |
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Term
nociceptor-specific neurons |
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Definition
actiavated only by noxious stimulation |
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Term
wide dynamic range neurons |
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Definition
respond to both noxious and innocuous input |
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Term
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Definition
pain system and crude touch. fibers are in the anterolateral column of the spinal cord. go to reticular formation and other components of the brain stem, some to thalamus |
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Term
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Definition
burning pain associated with contact with very cold objects can be reproduced by touching the skin with interlacing ars that were alternately hot and cold. shows pain can be evoked by a pattern of non-noxious stimuli |
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Term
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Definition
persistant pain in absence of any noxious stimuli |
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Term
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Definition
lesions of the thalamus associated with unbearable pain in a part of the body that is, by sensory testing, completely ansthetic |
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Term
gate control theory of Melzack and Wall |
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Definition
explanation for counter-irritation effect - rub area around injury relieves the pain to some degree. proposed that neural activity in large diameter cutaneous fibers, inhibited pain receptors from passing info to brain |
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Term
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Definition
control point in dorsal horn where pain impulses pass through |
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Term
periventricular gray (PVG) periaqueductal gray (PAG) |
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Definition
emotions and other psychological factors provoke activity in this part of the brain, which in turn activate the raphe nuclei of the medulla |
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Term
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Definition
activated by PVG and PAG of upper brainstem and diencephalon - project then to dorsal horn via dorsolateral columns |
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