Title: The Perception of Pain Lecture 27
1The Perception of Pain 11/1/07 Reasons For
Pain Peripheral Sensation of Pain Types of
Pain Neurotransmitters Hyperalgesia Nociception
and Antinociception Mechanisms of
Analgesia Neuropathic Pain
2Pain Is Good!
3Perception of Pain
4Types of Pain
- Nociceptive vs. Neuropathic pain
- Nociceptors
- Thermal
- Mechanical
- Polymodal
- Note nonnoxious stimuli myelinated Aß fibers
nonmyelinated C fibers
5Kandel figure 24.1
6Abnormal Pain States Hyperalgesia, Allodynia,
Neurogenic inflammation
Kandel figure 24.6
7(No Transcript)
8Peripheral Sensitization Hyperalgesia,
Allodynia, Neurogenic inflammation
Kandel pdf figure 24.7
9Silent Nociceptors
10Spinal Cord Synapses
Noxious
Non-noxious
Nociceptive-Specific Neurons Wide-dynamic-range
Neurons
Kandel pdf Figure 24-2
11Gate Control Theory of Pain
Kandel pdf figure 24.10
12Neurotransmittersin the Dorsal Horn of the
Spinal Cord
- Glutamate
- Neuropeptides
- eg. Substance P
- Notes
- Diffusion distance of neuropeptides
- Central Sensitization
Kandel figure 24.4
13Figure 24-5
14Referred Pain
Kandel pdf figure 24.3
15Centrally Mediated Hyperalgesia
- Windup
- Central Sensitization
16Gate Control Theory of Pain Thunbergs illusion
Kandel Box 24.1
17Gate Control Theory of Pain Thunbergs illusion
Kandel figure 24.9
185 Pain Pathways
Spinothalamic
- Spinothalamic
- Spinoreticular
- Spinomesencephalic
- Emotional response
- Spinohypothalamic
- Endocrine and cardiovascular responses
- cervicothalamic
Central Pain
Kandel figure 24.8
19Insular Cortex Asymbolia for pain.
20In-Class Exercise
- Where would you target drugs to alleviate pain?
- (which processes or anatomical targets)
- 2. What is the placebo effect and how would you
test to see if it exists. - Assuming that it does exist, what do you think
the mechanism is?
21Potential Targets for Reducing Pain Sensation
22Stimulate Ab fibers
Anterolateral cordotomy
http//apu.sfn.org/content/Publications/BrainFacts
/
23Other Forms of Central Pain
- Thalamic Syndrome
- Phantom Limb Pain
- Other syndrome and symptoms including
hyperalgesia, allodynia,etc.
Kandel 24.8
24Endogenous Opioids
µ, d, and ? opioid receptors
25Stimulation-Produced Analgesia
Kandel 24.11
26Integration of Descending and Ascending Pathways
in the Spinal Cord
Note Descending serotonin projections can come
from the nucleus raphe magnus descending
norepinephrine pathways can come from the locus
ceruleus
Kandel figure 24-13
27Kandel figure 24-13
28Opioid action 1) Postsynaptic Inhibition -
Increased K conductance 2) Presynaptic
Inhibition - Reduced transmitter release
due to reduced Ca2 influx (direct or
indirect)
Kandel figure 24-13
29Opioids continued
- Stress-induced analgesia
- Nonspecific effects of opioid drugs
- Tolerance
- Addiction
- Chronic opioid-resistant neuropathic pain
30Alternative pain therapies?