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Pathophysiology of Pain Nociception The detection of tissue damage by specialized transducers connected to A-delta and C-fibers Pain An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience which we primarily associate with tissue damage or describe in terms of such damage, or both Classification of Pain Nociception • Proportionate to the stimulation of the nociceptor • When acute – Physiologic pain – Serves a protective function – Normal pain • Pathologic when chronic Classification of Pain: Neuropathic Pain • Sustained by aberrant processes in PNS or CNS • Disproportionate to the stimulation of nociceptor • Serves no protective function • Pathologic pain Classification of Pain: Mixed Pain • Nociceptive components • Neuropathic components • Examples – Failed low-back-surgery syndrome – Complex regional pain syndrome Classification of Pain: Idiopathic Pain • No underlying lesion found yet, despite investigation • Pain disproportionate to the degree of clinically discernible tissue injury Normal Central Pain Mechanisms Peripheral and Central Pathways for Pain Ascending Tracts Descending Tracts Cortex Thalamus Midbrain Pons Medulla Spinal Cord Pain-Inhibitory and Pain-Facilitatory Mechanisms Within the Dorsal Horn 0 A-BETA A-DELTA _ _ Neuronal circuitry within the dorsal horn. Primary afferent neuron axons synapse onto spinothalamic neurons and onto inhibitory and excitatory neurons. + + STT NEURON ++ TO BRAIN C Rating of First and Second Pain Intensity Adapted with permission from Cooper BY, et al. Pain. 1986;24:103 and from Lee KH, et al. In: Fields HL, Dubner R, Cervero F, eds. Proceedings of the Fourth World Congress on Pain. New York, NY: Raven Press; 1985:204. Mechanisms of Pathologic Pain Mechanisms of Pathologic Pain: General Considerations • Pain-processing mechanisms function abnormally – Examples: neuropathic pain syndromes • Nociception is sustained by chronic injury – Example: arthritis Mechanisms of Pathophysiologic Pain: Peripheral Processes • Injured or diseased nerve(s) • Growth of axonal sprouts • Formation of ectopic foci Mechanisms of Pathophysiologic Pain: Central Sensitization Processes • Repeated impulse activity in C nociceptive • neurons produces sensitization of STT neurons over time Sensitization of STT neurons leads to – Increased spontaneous impulse activity – Enhanced responses to impulses in nociceptive and non-nociceptive primary afferents • Causes hyperalgesia, allodynia, and spontaneous pain Temporal summation of second pain (second pain summation is a result of repeated input from C-fiber). Temporal summation of responses of a dorsal horn (STT) neuron to repeated C-fiber stimulation and the effects of the NMDAreceptor antagonist ketamine. Reproduced with permission from Price DD, et al. In: Fields HL, Liebeskind JC, eds. Pharmacological Approaches to the Treatment of Chronic Pain: New Concepts and Critical Issues. Seattle, Wash: IASP Press; 1994:66. Mechanism of Central Sensitization Associated With Tonic C Nociceptor Input 0 A-BETA A-DELTA C Tonic activity in C nociceptors _ _ + + + STT ++ NEURON ++ ++ TO BRAIN Enhanced postsynaptic effects by NMDAreceptor sensitization Intracellular Mechanisms of Sensitization Reproduced with permission from Mao J, et al. Pain. 1995;61:361. Loss of Inhibitory Interneuron Function 0 A-BETA A-DELTA Tonic activity in C nociceptors _ _ + C + STT NEURON ++ ++ ++ TO BRAIN Enhanced postsynaptic effects by NMDAreceptor sensitization Brain-to-Spinal-Cord Modulation of Pain Pain Modulation Mechanisms • Brain centers/pathways that descend to the spinal cord and modulate pain • “Tail-flick test” • “Off-cells” inhibit transmission of painrelated information to the brain • “On-cells” facilitate transmission of painrelated signals to the brain Pathophysiology of Pain: Conclusion • Neuronal plasticity – Nociceptor, spinal cord, brain • Pain-facilitatory and pathophysiologic mechanisms – Wind-up phenomenon – Central sensitization • Modulating mechanisms – Ascending – Descending