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Pain 1 Types of Pain Acute Pain – Complex combination of sensory, perceptual, & emotional experiences as a result of a noxious stimulus – Mediated by rapidly conducting nerve pathways & associated with increased muscle tone, heart rate, & blood pressure (sympathetic nervous system response) – Intensity depends of the degree of injury – Serves as a protective function – Tx – reduce inflammation & modify transmission of pain 2 Types of Pain Chronic Pain – Starts as acute pain but persists ≥ 3 – 6 months – Continues even after noxious stimulus is absent (unlike chronic inflammation) – Associated with physical (strength, endurance), psychological, & social dysfunction – Source maybe increased sympathetic response (increased sensitivity of nociceptors) or financial gain – Tx – decrease risk of chronic pain by using physical agents &/or meds to tx acute pain 3 Types of Pain Chronic pain 4 Types of Pain Referred Pain – Felt at one area distant from the source Ex – spinal nerve root impingement, angina – Pain may be referred from a nerve to innervation site or from different areas of the same dermatome – Clinicians should not “chase” pain – Rule-out proximal sources of pain – Determine the structure(s) that are responsible for the pain Rotator cuff injuries can refer pain to the lateral & upper arm Kidney pathologies can refer pain to the low back 5 6 Mechanisms of Pain Reception and Transmission Specificity Theory – Type of pain depends on the stimulation of specific nerve endings Pattern Theory – Type of pain depends on intensity or frequency of stimulation of receptors that also respond to touch, pressure, or temperature 7 Mechanisms of Pain Reception and Transmission Pain Receptors – Nociceptors can be activated by thermal, mechanical, or chemical stimuli 8 Mechanisms of Pain Reception and Transmission Peripheral Nerve Pathways – C fibers (80%) – cause sensation of dull, throbbing, aching, or burning pain – A-delta fibers (20%) – cause sharp, stabbing, pricking pain – Both types of fibers may or may not be stimulated 9 Mechanisms of Pain Reception and Transmission Pain-spasm cycle – Muscle guarding 10 Whiplash injury – Muscle guarding – “Protective guarding” 11 12 Pain Modulation and Control Gate Control Theory – Proposed by Melzack & Wall (1965) – Degree of pain is determined by the balance of excitatory and inhibitory inputs to the spinal cord – Increased activity of the non-nociceptive fibers causes inhibition of nociceptive fibers 13 Pain Modulation and Control Gate Control Theory – Physical agents and interventions “close the gate” for pain by activating nonnociceptive nerves – Ex’s – traction, compression, & massage 14 Pain Modulation and Control The Endogenous Opioid System – Pain can be modulated by endogenous opioids – Opioids bind to opioids receptors in the nervous system which inhibits pain – Electrical stimulation has been shown to release endogenous opioids 15 Measuring Pain Visual Analog & Numeric Scales – VAS – draw a line on the scale to indicate the present level of pain – Numeric scale – rate pain from 0-10/10 or 1 to 100 – Face Scale - Used for individuals who have difficulty understanding the VAS and numeric scales 16 Measuring Pain Comparison with a Predefined Stimulus – May allow greater intrasubject & intersubject reliability – The subject compares the present pain to a predefined stimulus Tourniquet pain, electrical pain, thermal pain, or pressure pain You can imagine the limitations to this form of assessment!!! 17 Measuring Pain Semantic Differential Scales – Consists of word lists and categories that represent various aspects of pain – McGill pain questionnaire – Attempts to quantify pain 18 Measuring Pain Other Measures – Daily activity/pain logs – Body diagrams – Open-ended, structured interviews – Pain response to examination tests/measures 19 Pain Management Approaches Pharmacological Approaches – Systemic Analgesics – Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) – Acetaminophen – Opiates – Antidepressants – Spinal Analgesia – Local Injection 20 Pain Management Approaches Physical Agents – Cryotherapy – reduce local metabolism & slow production of histamine, bradykinin, & prostaglandins – Cryotherapy, thermotherapy, & traction stimulate non-nociceptive nerve fibers – Physical agents have some advantages over medications Ex – less side-effects and can be readily used by the patient (ice pack or hot pack) 21 Pain Management Approaches Multidisciplinary Pain Treatment Programs – Teams consist of the patient, families, PTs, MDs, RNs, psychologists, etc – Management techniques include: medications, physical agents, therapeutic exercise, &/or psychological intervention Pain Clinics 22