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Pain: Underlying Mechanisms, Rationale for Assessment. Jessie VanSwearingen , Ph.D, PT Associate Professor Department of Physical Therapy University of Pittsburgh School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences. PAIN.
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Pain: Underlying Mechanisms, Rationale for Assessment Jessie VanSwearingen, Ph.D, PT Associate Professor Department of Physical Therapy University of Pittsburgh School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences
PAIN “…an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience….primarily associate with tissue damage or describe in terms of such damage or both.” Intl. Assoc. for Study of Pain
The Report of Pain 3 components of the patients experience: • sensory discriminative (localize, quality) • motivational / affective (emotional) • cognitive / evaluative (meaning)
The Report of Pain Relation of pain and tissue damage: not consistent or constant ‘All pain is truly experienced’ (-- a helpful clinician belief…)
Terminology of Pain Nocioception neural response related to potentially tissue damaging stimuli Pain conscious experience of nocioception
Terminology of Pain Experience of pain • dysthesia - experience abnormal noxious sensation • paraesthesia - abnormal nonpainful sensation; • hyperpathia- exaggerated pain response to noxious or nonoxious stimuli) • allodynia - perception of nonoxious stimuli as painful
Terminology of Pain • hyperalgesia increased pain response to painful stimuli • hypoalgesia - decreased sensitivity to noxious stimuli • hyperesthesia and hypoesthesia - increase or decrease, respectively, in sensitivity to nonnoxious stimuli
Characteristics of Pain Nocioceptive pain - directly related to the activation of peripheral nocioceptors somatic - aching , squeezing, stabbing visceral - cramping, knawing, rise and fall
Characteristics of Pain • Neuropathic - pain assumed to be related to aberrant sensory processing (PNS or CNS) • Deafferentation- sympathetic maintained alterations in peripheral transmission or central representation ‘burning, lancinating, electrical’
Characteristics of Pain • Idiopathic - pain persisting without identifiable organic basis or excessive pain for organic processes (presumes some clinical correlation) (psychogenic - no clinical observations correlating with the pain)
Nocioceptive Pain Activation of nocioceptors by tissue-damaging stimuli. Mechanisms: • neurogenic inflammation - vasodilation; inflammatory cells; antidromic (polymodal) nocioceptor release of Substance P and others from nerve terminals • endogenous substances - directly activate nocioceptors - histamine, Subs. P, bradykinin, ACH, serotonin, K+ • prostoglandins - sensitize nocioceptors: produce lower thresholds for noxious stimuli (also: serotonin, ADP, NE, interleukin, NGF); role in development of chronic pain
Neuropathic Pain Peripheral tissue injury leading to aberrant somatosensory processingpathophysiologic changes, which sustain a pain experience. Mechanisms: • peripheral generators • sympathetic maintained • central (mechanism) generators
Neuropathic Pain Example: Axonal Injury 1) multiple axon sprouts neuroma 2) axon sprouts spontaneous activity (peripheral generator) pain 3) neuromas sensitive - “tenderness” mechanical and chemical sensitivity chronic pain 4) ephases - spread of impulses in juxtaposed nerve fibers; incl sympathetic nerves (sympathetic maintained) 5) ectopic generation of impulses in DRG, transmitter releasedorsal horn neurons expand receptive fields (hyperalgesa)
Neuropathic Pain:CNS Activity • Increased activity in spinal cord, thalamus, cortex following peripheral nerve injury: • central sensitization of neurons • abnormal feedback (sympathetic outflow stimulate peripheral nocioceptors)
Clinical Events of Pain Hyperalgesia • 1º -site of injury: peripheral nocioceptor sensitization • 2 º -surrounding region: peripheral and central mechanisms • central - hyperexcitable neruon activated by nocioceptor Pain episodes with the same phenomena may not have the same mechanism
Referred Pain Phenomena: • stimulation of peripheral nerve fascicles, report of pain throughout the extremity • pain from muscle or visceral injury accompanied by cutaneous hyperalgesia convergence-projection theory • convergent input of nocioceptors from different sources on to the same projection neurons or central neurons
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Joint Nocioceptors 1. nocioceptors - polymodal cutaneous receptor; c-fiber, unmyelinated (capsule, type IV) 2. free- nerve endings - A -delta nocioceptors in int’l and ext’l joint ligaments 3. Synovium - small diameter, neuropeptide containing fibers A-delta and C-fibers innervate joint nocioceptors; ? Also sensitive mechanical and chemical stimuli
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Joint Mechanoreceptors 1. Large diameter, fast-conducting afferents, serving….. 2. Corpuscular receptors - low-threshold, dynamic receptors; capsule outer layer -type I, subsynovial layer - type II, dynamic receptors on surface of joint ligaments 3. Mechanically Insensitive Afferents (MIAs) - C-fiber afferents, become sensitive to mechanical stimuli only with inflamed joint
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: “Sleeping Nocioceptors” (MIAs) • insensitive to pain or mechanical stimuli • become spontaneously active • active during non-noxious movement • enlarged receptive fields • (central targets unknown)
Cutaneous afferents muscle afferents visceral Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Spinal Cord Mechanisms Dorsal horn neurons: nocioceptive specific (NS) wide dynamic range (WDR) articular inputs • Basis for arthritic pain being: • poorly localized • poorly discriminated • Basis for: referred pain and hyperalgesia
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Spinal Cord Mechanisms Noxious joint inputs reach cortical targets. • inputs from inflamed joints appear to take paths to widespread supraspinal targets With persistent nocioceptive input, dorsal horn neurons in sensitivity • enhanced responsiveness • enlarged receptive fields
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Spinal Cord Mechanisms With acute joint inflammation, (sensitivity) 1) dorsal horn neurons with little response to movement show large response (enhanced receptive fields) 2) respond to stimuli remote from the site of inflammation 3) become spontaneously active
Basis for Joint and Bone Pain: Somatosensory Cortex Chronic inflammation receptive field changes • increased ‘background activity’ • prolonged response to non-noxious stimuli (reduced inhibition of pain afferents in the dorsal horn - decreased descending inhibitory pain projections with inflammation)
Neurogenic Inflammation Example: “axon reflex” - localized vasodilation and exudation in response to an irritant - intact sensory innervation - mediated by release of neuropeptides from C-fiber terminals change in vascular tone and permeability production of inflammatory cells; immune response
Neurogenic Inflammation • Partially attenuated by Substance P depleter (eg capsaicin) • In Rheumatoid Arthritis, reduced neuropeptide Y (vasoconstrictor) in the sympathetic nerve terminals no ‘stop’ to the inflammatory response
Summary of Pathophysiology of Joint and Bone Pain Chemical Nocioception • pain activation of nocioceptors • primary hyperalgesia - sensitization of nocioceptors • swelling, vascular response to neuropeptide release
Summary of Pathophysiology of Joint and Bone Pain Mechanical Nocioception • (joint bomechanics) “mechanical nocioceptors activated • primary hyperalgesia, sensitized mechano - nocioceptors • mechanoreceptors, incl remote musculotendinous site receptors, induce dorsal horn plasticity
Summary of Pathophysiology of Joint and Bone Pain Secondary Hyperalgesia / Neuropathic Model • altered central pathways with chronic arthritis (both altered dorsal horn neurons responding and the pattern of the response) • changes in threshold for response • changes in projection targets • changes in the responsiveness • referred pain to: other joints; cutaneous areas and deeper tissues
Clinical Assessment of Joint and Bone Pain Looking for: • anatomic origin - define the tissue damage • mechanisms of pain production • associated disease
Clinical Assessment of Joint and Bone Pain Finding a hyperalgesic joint in the region of pain - likely to be the origin - other signs: crepitus, swelling (implies nocioceptors activated) but in osteoarthritis: mechanoreceptors could elicit mechanical nocioception and sensitize primary afferents….. Joints which don’t move and joints that move properly can be painful.
Clinical Assessment of Joint and Bone Pain Recognizing Bone pain: (causes: vascular, infection, neoplastic, metabolic) • not influenced by posture or movement • worse at night • well localized, over the painful site (eg vertebra) (eg. Osteonecrosis; osteoporotic fracture) Review this lecture