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Aug 08, 2013
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About This Presentation
Pain theories, history of pain theories, different theories for pain control
Size: 628.97 KB
Language: en
Added: Aug 08, 2013
Slides: 23 pages
Slide Content
1220106
CONTENTS
Introduction to Pain
Pain Control Theories
Integration and Application of Pain Theories
I cant stand this!
It is derived from the Latin word “poena” meaning
fine, penalty, or punishment.
“An unpleasant sensory & emotional experience
associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or
described in terms of such damage” –
The International Association for the Study of Pain
PAIN
What is pain
•Shooting
•Throbbing
•Numb
•Sore
•Burning
•Agony
•Sharp
•Pounding
•Cramping
•Stabbing
•Tender
•Aching
•Annoying
•Debilitating
Pathways for pain signals
Nociceptors
•Sensitive to repeated or prolonged stimulation
•Mechanosensitive –excited by stress & tissue damage
•Chemosensitive –excited by the release of chemical
mediators
–Bradykinin, Histamine, Prostaglandins, Arachadonic Acid
•Primary Hyperalgesia –due to injury
•Secondary Hyperalgesia –due to spreading of chemical
mediators
1.Specificity Theory
2.Pattern Theory
3.Gate Control Theory
4.Neuromatrix Theory
5.Central Biasing Theory
6.Endogenous Opiates Theory
Pain Control Theories
4 types of sensory receptors –heat,
cold, touch, pain
A nerve responded to only one type
Nerve was continuous from the
periphery to the brain
•With this theory, pain depends on the relative amount of
traffic in two different sensory pathways which carry
information from the sense organs to the brain.
–Slow/Small fibers
•No myelin sheaths, so messages delivered more slowly. Very intense
stimuli (like that caused by a tissue injury) send strong signals on
these slow fibers.
•Slow/small fibers open the gate = you feel pain
–Fast/Large fibers
•Deliver most sensory information to the brain. Covered by fatty
myelin sheaths so delivery is faster.
•Fast/large fibers close the gate = block pain signals
•Explains why:
–Drugs (pain relievers like aspirin)
–Competing stimuli (like acupuncture)
–The mere expectation of treatment effects (like placebos)
can sometimes block pain.
3. Gate Control Theory
•Example:
–Bumping the head
•The initial trauma activates the A-
delta and, eventually, C fibers
•Rubbing the traumatized area
stimulates the A-beta fibers, which
activate the SG to close the spinal
gate
•Thus inhibiting transmission of the
painful stimulus
Factors which can open the gate
•Physical conditions
Extent of injury
Nature of injury
•Emotional states
Anxiety
Worry
Tension
Depression
•Cognitive states
Focusing on the pain
Boredom
•Lack of activity
Fitness, Exercise
•Physical conditions
Medication
Counterstimulation (e.g. heat, massage, accupuncture)
•Emotional state
Positive emotions (e.g., happiness, optimism)
Relaxation
Rest
•Mental state
Intense concentration or distraction
Involvement and interest in activities
•Activity
Fitness, Exercise
Factors which can close the gate
Beecher (1946 & 1956) looked at requests for pain relief
amongst soldiers and compared these to the request made
by civilians with the same injuries.
Most of the soldiers claimed not to perceive any pain and
only a quarter of them requested pain relief.
80% of civilians asked for analgesic support. Beecher
argued that the context in which the pain was experienced
had an impact on the way in which it was perceived.
Past Experience of Pain
ThisGatetheoryhasbeenwidelyaccepted,butit
leavesunansweredquestions,suchaschronicpainissues,
sex-baseddifferencesandtheeffectsofpreviouspain
experiences.
Castel (1970s)
•Least understood of all the theories
–Stimulation of A-delta & C fibers causes release of B-
endorphins from the Periaquaductal Gray Area (PGA) &
Nucleus Raphe Magnus (NRM) –release serotonin
Or
•ACTH/B-lipotropin is released from the anterior pituitary in
response to pain –broken down into B-endorphins and
corticosteroids
•Mechanism of action –similar to enkephalins to block
ascending nerve impulses
•Examples:
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation TENS
(low freq. & long pulse duration)
Usingtriggerpointsasanexample,paintheoriescanbe
integratedandappliedtopainmanagementstrategies.
Pain management begins with identifying the source of pain,
decreasing the chemical and mechanical causes, and
facilitating tissue healing.
Therapeuticmodalities,medications,exercise,andsurgery
areexamplesoftoolsusedtofacilitatetissuehealingand
reducepain.Manualtherapiessuchasmuscleenergy,
massage,andmyofascialreleasearenon-traditionalways
tomanagepain