PAIN.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pathophysiology of Pain
Advertisements

TREATMENT OF NEUROPATHIC PAIN
The Somatic Sensory System Chapter 12 Friday, November 7, 2003.
Chapter 42 Pain.
1 Somatic Sensation ( MCB160 Lecture by Mu-ming Poo, Friday March 9, 2007) Introduction –Adrian’s work on sensory coding –Spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia.
Pain - Basic Science Implications for Analgesia & Analgesics Neural Plasticity Research Group Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Massachusetts.
4th Annual Thoughtful Pain Management
Fibromyalgia Research: From Neurasthenia to Central Processing Abnormalities Laurence A. Bradley, PhD Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology.
Chronic Pain. What is pain? A sensory and emotional experience of discomfort. Single most common medical complaint.
how the brain receives and interprets information from the environment
Dysfunction … A review of the literature. Dynamic Chiropractic June 26, 2000 Volume 18, Number 14 “ Goals of Care: Minimize Pain and Maximize Function.
Paul ThawleyMSc CLINICAL REASONING
Assisted Professor Basic Science Department 2012
Basics of Pain Assessment. Pathophysiology Nociceptive pain Neuropathic pain Idiopathic pain Psychogenic pain Commensurate with identifiable tissue damage.
A Sample Lay Lecture for the Students of NYCC Lisa K. Bloom, D.C. Christopher J Good, D.C., MA (Ed) Associate Professors, New York Chiropractic College.
Pain Pain: is a subjective sensation that accompanies the activation of nociceptors which signals actual or potential tissue damage. Pain is stimulated.
Mechanisms of tinnitus generation Carol A. Bauer Current Opinion in Otolaryngology & Head and Neck Surgery 2004,12:413 – 417 R1 石堅.
Local Anaesthesia: Neurophysiology Pain : Pain : –An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage. –Two.
Why do we do it? Is it all that important? Can it be changed?
What is Chronic Pain? Lori Montgomery MD CCFP Clinical Lecturer, Departments of Family Medicine and Anesthesia Medical Director, AHS Chronic Pain Centre.
Understanding and Managing Pain
Understanding and Managing Pain
Chronic Pain. What is pain? A sensory and emotional experience of discomfort. Single most common medical complaint.
Functional Organization of Nervous Tissue Chapter 11
Hurt vs. Harm Tissue Healing & Recovery Presented by:[name]
Understanding and Explaining Pain Level 2 Pain Training Fife Integrated Pain Management Service.
Session 1: Your Body On Stress. Welcome! This session… … we will learn about the stress response, how it impacts our health, and identify personal stress.
UNIT VII: PAIN. Objectives: By the end of this lecture the students will be able to : Review the concept of somatosensory pathway. Describe the function.
PAIN. SUBJECTIVE, INDIVIDUALIZED PERCEIVED ONLY BY THE PATIENT PAIN.
Flash Cards 832 week one and two. How does the brain initiate the cerebellar clamp? and the answer is... Click here for the answer.
PSY2301: Biological Foundations of Behavior Somatosensory System Chapter 11.
Unraveling the Mystery of Chronic Pain
PHT 222 – UNIT – 4 – TENS - QUIZ. TRUE OR FALSE  TENS is the application of E.S. to the skin via surface electrodes to stimulate nerve (Sensory) fibers.
1 Fibromyalgia: A Chronic Widespread Neurologic Pain Condition Disease Overview, Diagnosis, and Management PBP00542 © 2009 Pfizer Inc. All rights reserved.
The Nervous System Period 1 By Griffin, Paige, and Claire.
Pain The 5 th Vital Sign Pain Whatever the person says it is, whenever he says he has it! Unpleasant sensation Emotional component.
Standard 9: Objective 1 Purpose of therapeutic modalities To provide the optimal healing environment for healing to take place Thermal, mechanical, electrical,
ANALGESIC DRUGS # PHL 322, Lab. 3#.
PERSISTENT PAIN & Physical Therapy
Chapter 11 Mental Health.
Mental and Emotional Health
Copyright © 2013 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc.
© UWCM/SONMS/Pain/MJohn
PAIN MANAGEMENT.
THE NERVOUS SYSTEM Science 10.
CENTRAL REPRESENTATION OF THE TOUCH
W5D3H3: Sensory Receptors
Spinal Nerves and Reflex Arc
Pain, Stress and Endocannabinoids
The Nervous System.
The PNS Provides links to and from the external world and body
מניעה וטיפול בכאב הרצאת בסיס – 4h
PAIN and its MANAGEMENT
Touch and Pain By: Anne George and Lydia Zhang
Nervous System.
Nervous System Sensitization
Christian A. von Hehn, Ralf Baron, Clifford J. Woolf  Neuron 
Pain.
Chapter 19A Somatic Senses
Treatment of postherpetic neuralgia: a review of therapeutic options
dr. Henny Anggraini Sadeli SpS(K)
The Nervous System.
Mechanisms of neuropathic pain
Postural Assessment.
Done by Abdallah Ayyoub
Pain management Done by : Sudi maiteh.
Fibromyalgia.
Sensory and Motor Pathways
Section 1: Structures of the Nervous System
Abdurrahman Omar As-sarisi
Presentation transcript:

PAIN

Perception

What hurts more?

PERCEPTION Two senarios

Perception of pain

“what determines the volume level of symptoms, how is it that some people amplify their symptoms, and others de amplify them?” Do some individuals “amplify” their symptoms? Does amplification reflect the fact that patients have different explanatory models for understanding the significance of their pain?

What do we think causes pain? Tissue damage Posture & muscle imbalances

How we typically think of pain

Nociception Nociception is the process by which intense thermal, mechanical or chemical stimuli are detected by a subpopulation of peripheral nerve fibers, called nociceptors Their high threshold differentiates nociceptors from sensory neurons

Nociceptors are excited only when stimulus intensities reach the noxious range located in the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) for the body and the trigeminal ganglion for the face.

Noxious stimuli An external or internal physical change that induces afferent input in the nervous system, with or without sensory experience or a behavioral response. A noxious stimulus is actually, or potentially, damaging to tissue and liable to cause pain, but does not invariably do so

Nociception is simply a sensory signal indicating potential harm Nociception is simply a sensory signal indicating potential harm. Pain is a conscious experience, and whether nociception ends up being perceived as pain depends on many more factors.

Pain without nociception is entirely possible

Phantom limb pain

Because phantom limb pain feels so real, it is reasonable to conclude that the body we normally feel is subserved by the same neural processes in the brain; these processes are normally activated and modulated by inputs from the body, but they can act in the absence of any inputs

Neuromatrix

What we think causes it

Postural Structural Biomechanical Model Misalignments can “impose excessive stress on the spine leading to degeneration/damage or dysfunction and eventually to painful back conditions In this model, the imbalances and symmetries increase the abnormal mechanical/physical stresses imposed on the musculoskeletal system. This may lead recurrent injury or the development chronic conditions through a gradual process of wear-and-tear

Does poor posture really equal pain?

“does it really matter if these PSB factors or minor control changes exist and would they cause some catastrophic failure in the musculoskeletal system?”

“the spine can undergo profound physical changes that are well tolerated without the development of a symptomatic condition.”

Biological Reserves and Tolerance

Biological reserve allows for such losses without a negative effect on spinal function or the development of a condition. The system is capable of tolerating and compensating for these factors within the available surplus.

Trunk stabilization is achieved by what level of contraction? Add 32 kg weight to the torso- now what?

Muscle Imbalances? “whether insufficient or excessive, a deviation from optimal extensibility is thought to precipitate unusual wear and tear on capusular structures and articular surfaces of involved joints. It is suggested that deviations from optimal extensibility contribute to muscle imbalances, faulty posture, and dysfunctional movement. Although guidelines for what constitutes insufficient, optimal, and excessive extensibility measurements are based on the science of kinematics, their clinical validity has rarely been studied.

Chronic Pain

alterations of the pain pathway lead to hypersensitivity, such that pain outlives its usefulness as an acute warning system and instead becomes chronic and debilitating http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P MC2852643/

GOOD

ANNOYING

Nociceptive pain is an adaptive alarm system, persistent pain is maladaptive Essentially an ongoing false alarm

Central sensitization

Net Effect: recruitment of previously subthreshold inputs to cause pain Produces pain hypersensitivity

Allodynia Hperalgesia

Fear avoidance “higher fear avoidance, sensory pain, anxiety, depression, disability, and response to pain provocation test. This group demonstrated a greater likelihood of having allodynia (pain in response to non noxious stimuli) and was judged to have a dominant psychosocial component to presentation”

At baseline may predict chronicity

Short version

Long versionn