Title: Definition of Pain (IASP)
1(No Transcript)
2Nociception and Pain
Definition of Pain (IASP) An unpleasant sensory
and emotional experience associated with actual
or potential tissue damage, or described in terms
of such damage.
3Nociception vs Pain
- Tranduction
- Conduction
- Spinal Processing
- Perception
Nociceptors are a specific subset of peripheral
sensory organs which respond to noxious stimuli.
4Categories of Pain
Physiological Clinical Persistent
5Physiological Pain
- Fast pain carried by Ad fibers
- Sharp
- Well-localized
- Slow pain carried by C fibers
- Aching
- Poorly localized
6Nociceptor Activation
Heat ? VR1
nucleus
Ca2
Glutamate
ATP ? P2X2
H ? ASIC
Na/Ca2
?
PKA/PKC
? Bradykinin
? Mechanical
VR1 vanilloid receptor ASICacid sensing ion
channels P2X2purinergic receptor
7Nociceptors in Teeth
1. A? fibers thermoreceptors mechanoreceptor 2.
C fibers polymodal (chemoreceptors)
8Hydrodynamic Mechanism of Dental Pain
- Odontoblast
- Predentin
- Dentin
- Odontoblastic Process
- Subodontoblastic Nerve Plexus
- A? Fiber
- Axon Terminal in Tubule
9Spinal Processing
- Nociceptive nerve endings synapse in the spinal
cord (substantia gelatinosa) or medulla (nucleus
of the spinal tract of CN V). - Information passed to thalamus through the
activation of secondary (projection) neurons.
Spinal Nucleus (C.N. V)
Substantia Gelatinosa
10Referred Pain
Visceral Nociceptors
- Fibers usually run with autonomic fibers
- Large receptive fields
- Converge on neurons that receive somatic input
11(No Transcript)
12Ascending CNS Pathways
- Spino- and trigemino-thalamic tracts
- Thalamus (sensory-discrimination)
- Reticular/limbic systems (motivational-affective)
- Cortex (cognitive-evaluative)
13Gate Control Theory of Pain (Melzack and Wall,
1965)
Ad C
Ab
14Descending CNS Pathways
Inhibition Facilitation
15Inhibition
Facilitation
5-HT, NA(a2) GABA, GLY ENK, DNY bEN, ACh
5-HT, NA(a1) GLUT, SP ACh (nic)
PAIN
EXIN
ININ
ACh(nic) CCK DNY (N)
bEN, GABA GLY, ENK DNY (k)
DRG
DRG
SP GLUT
SP GLUT
-
-
Nx
Nx
PN
PN
16Endogenous Opioids Stress-induced Analgesia
- Enkephalins dorsal horn
- Dynorphins hypothalamus, PAG, dorsal horn
- ?-endorphins (involved in stress-induced
analgesia) hypothalamus
17Clinical Pain (Inflammatory or Post-surgical Pain)
Hyperalgesia
Allodynia
18Primary Hyperalgesia Peripheral Sensitization
Na Channels TTx-S/?TTx-R
B Transcription
B
VR1, Na channels.
Heat ? VR1
Glutamate ? SP
H ? ASIC
A
ATP ? P2X2
? PGs
? Bradykinin
? NGF Cytokines
A Sensitization
19Secondary Hyperalgesia Central Sensitization
CNS
Periphery
Injury site
DRG/TG
- Injury and inflammatory response results in
increased nociceptor activation
- Afferent barrage leads to
- Increased excitability
- Decreased inhibition
20NMDA Receptor (N-methyl-D-aspartate)
- Natural agonist is glutamate usually blocked by
Mg2 - Depolarization opens channel by removing block
- Channel opening has a long duration (100 ms)
permitting summation of inputs (wind-up)
21Analgesics
22The Pharmacological Approach
23Inhibition
Facilitation
5-HT, NA(a2) GABA, GLY ENK, DNY bEN, ACh
5-HT, NA(a1) GLUT, SP ACh (nic)
PAIN
EXIN
ININ
ACh(nic) CCK DNY (N)
bEN, GABA GLY, ENK DNY (k)
DRG
DRG
SP GLUT
SP GLUT
-
-
Nx
Nx
PN
PN
24The Problem of Persistent Pain
- Peripheral Processes
- Spontaneous activity
- Sympathetic activity
- Nociceptor sensitization
- Central Processes
- Central sensitization
- Spinal reorganization
- Cortical reorganization
- Loss of inhibitory pathways