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Neuroanatomy/Pain Review

Neuroanatomy/Pain Review. Anatomy. Dendrite. Cell body (in ganglion) nucleus Dendrites. Body. axon. Synapse. Anatomy Cont. Axons (actual nerve fibers) peripheral nervous system: may be covered by myelin sheath (schwann cell) which allows for regrowth

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Neuroanatomy/Pain Review

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  1. Neuroanatomy/Pain Review

  2. Anatomy Dendrite • Cell body (in ganglion) • nucleus • Dendrites Body axon Synapse

  3. Anatomy Cont. • Axons (actual nerve fibers) • peripheral nervous system: may be covered by myelin sheath (schwann cell) which allows for regrowth • CNS: oligodendrocytes are the “myelin” but it doesn't allow for regrowth

  4. Anatomy Cont. • Nodes of Ranier: breaks in myelin. Action potentials jump from node to node (salutatory condition) myelin acts as resistance and insulation and thus needs nodes for function.

  5. Nerve Types • Afferent; sensory nerves (ascending tracts) • AA Beta): sensory, large diameter with myelin (Fastest) • A delta: pain fibers, smaller with less myelin (4-30m/s) • C: pain, smallest, non myelinated (.5-2m/s) dull slow pain • See Prentice Table 1-2 for Classes of Afferent Neurons • Note: First pain is from Adelts (faster), second pain is C

  6. Nerve Types Cont. • Efferent Nerves: motor nerves (descending tracts) • Gamma: motor neuron • Ascending and descending tracts: • myelination increases conduction velocity • Diameter increases conduction velocity (less resistance)

  7. Nerve Types: • Afferent Nerves CNS ABeta Adelta C

  8. Physiology • Excitable Tissue: only nerves and muscles are excitable tissue due to the fact only they have a resting membrane potential

  9. Physiology Cont. • Resting membrane Potential: a chemical and electrical balance with a pump to aid in return to homeostasis. • at rest membrane in -70 mV to -90 mV • semipermeable membrane which is impermeable to Sodium at rest

  10. Physiology Cont. • Sodium Potassium pump keeps the potential by pump in K+ in and Na+ out • Na+ want in the cell but if it gets in an action potential is formed • to +30 mV (a 100 mV difference) • hormone , chemical, electrical, thermal or mechanical factors may create action potentials • As athletic trainers we try and change this status and create an action potential

  11. Threshold • The minimum amount of stimulus necessary to create an action potential • Polar: refers to negative • depolarize: less negative • repolarize: becoming negative • hyperpolarize: more negative

  12. Physiology Cont. • All or none theory: If stimulus meets the threshold, action potential will always go to +30mV, even if supra-threshold stimulus is given

  13. Physiology Cont. • Refractory period: membrane potential goes below the resting potential of -70mV and may not be stimulated for a given period of time. This limits how many action potentials may be produced • Absolute refractory period: NO stimulus will create a response no matter how strong • Relative refractory period: resting potential is much lower, therefore a higher stimulus is needed

  14. Pain How is this class affecting your pain receptors?

  15. Pain • The purpose of pain is as a protective mechanism. Pain is an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage: • The types of pain are • Acute • Chronic • Referred

  16. Acute Pain • First pain: carried in A-delta fires: larger diameter fibers contain myelin, reflex to get off source, goes to cognitive level (more discrete - very localized) • Second Pain: carried in C fibers. Smaller diameter, non myelinated, slower. (less discrete - more diffuse)

  17. Acute Pain Treatment • Goal • block the pain through: • inhibition • blocking A fibers (Gate Control)

  18. Chronic Pain: • Any pain which lasts for six months or more (in athletes we may consider chronic pain to be pain which is continue from months but is not in proportion to tissue injury or activity... i.e... chronic tendinitis may be long lasting but have organic root) • No real purpose (?) • numerous by-passes. Also goes to limbic system (emotional control)- learned response

  19. Chronic Pain • Goals in treating • unlearn the Pain • Acute pain control techniques are usually ineffective • Exercise my affect pain by distraction • Important to have guidance under a physician

  20. Referred Pain (projected pain) • Felt at other site than injured area • Dermatome (skin represented by nerve root) • Myotome (muscle innovated by nerve root) • Sclerotome (bones innovated by nerve root)

  21. Pain Transmission A-Beta C-Delta Doral Horn Acute Pain Acute Pain Noxious Stimulus travel Via A-Delta and C-delta Fibers to Dorsal Horn (spinal Cord) STT (Spinal thalamic Tract) Limbic System & Cortex Thalamus and Cortex location and discrimination Pain Transmitted to Higher Brain Centers Descending Control Mech. Activated here once noxious stimuli reaches higher centers of brain. Incoming stimuli can be inhibited at various levels and endoginous opiates released Retinacular Formation & Periaquductal Gray (PAG) Motor, sensory and autonomic Response Discrimination and Location of pain occurs during this sequence

  22. Pain theories • Specificity Theory • Pattern Theory • Gate Control Theory

  23. Specificity theory: specific stimulus has a specific receptor which goes to a location in the brain The specific location identifies the pain’s quality. Thus any noxious stimulus applied to the surface of the skin results in a pain sensation. The evaluation of the type of pain occurs in the brain.

  24. Pattern Theory: a pattern or coding of sensory information is created by different sensations. This theory is faulty due to the number of different types of receptors proven to exist.

  25. Gate Control Theory (1965) • Melzack and Wall originally described a neurophsiologic mechanism which involved the concept of peripheral and central “gating”. The gate theory utilizes the specificity theory and the pattern theory and added the interaction of peripheral afferents with a modulation system in the spinal cord gray matter. Additionally Melzack and Wall believed there also exists a descending modulation system.

  26. Gate Control Theory • First Order neurons: the theory focuses on the first order neurons (primary afferents): the A-beta (large diameter sensory neurons) and A-delta and C neurons (both small diameter sensory neurons). • A non-painful stimulus can block the transmission of a noxious stimulus Brain/Pain centers A-beta non-painful stimulus Blocking entry of c-delta Fibers C delta noxious stimulus

  27. Gate Control Theory Cont. • The second order neuron, the T-cell and the substantia gelatinosa (Rexed’s laminae II and II of the dorsal horn of the spinal gray matter) can exert affects on the primary afferent • Works on the premise that the SG (located in dorsal horn) modulates afferent nerve impulses and influence transmission of T cells. This activates a central controlling mechanism

  28. Gate Control • In Dorsal Horn of Spinal Cord Brain . A-Beta Sensory, Proprioception, Etc T SG Inhibitory Synapse A-Delta, C Fibers Pain Transmission Facilitator Synapse

  29. The second order neuron • When the substantia gelatinosa is active the “gate” is closed and there is a decrease in the amount of sensory input to the T-cell • If the S.G. is relatively inactive the “gate” is open • the balance of activity in the large and small diameter sensory neurons determines the position of the “gate”

  30. Gate Control Theory • Large diameter afferents cause an initial increase in the T-cells followed by a reduction of activity. The initial increase is due to direct activation of the second-order neuron by primary afferents. The reduction is an indirect result due to large-diameter afferents also activating the s.g. cells which causes the gate to close

  31. Gate Control Theory Cont. • Small diameter afferents increase T-cell activity by these primary afferents also activate inhibitory interneurons that reduce activity in the s.g which open the gate

  32. Gate Control Theory • When the balance of small to large diameter sensory neuronal input is no longer maintained and reaches a critical value the second-order neurons are activated. This activation is of the ascending system and leads to the perception of pain and the subsequent behavioral responses.

  33. Gate Control Theory • The Descending control system in which emotion and past experience evoke descending input, impinging upon the gating mechanism to block pain sensation at the spinal level. • PAIN is an excellent “bible” for those working clinically with pain control

  34. Pain modulation: Levels Theory of Pain Control • Spinal Levels of Pain Control • Gate Control Theory • Central Biasing (hyperstimulation analgesia) • Endogenous Opiate (Pituitary level)

  35. Level I: Presynaptic inhibition Gate Control Theory • The concept that when several sensory stimuli reach the spinal cord at the same location and time. one of them becomes dominant. • As long as the stimulation is causing firing of the sensory nerve, the gate to pain should be closed • If accommodation occurs (electrical stimulus) the gate is then open and pain returns

  36. A theory of pain modulation where higher centers such as the cerebral cortex influence the perception of and response to pain Impulses from higher centers act to close the gate and block transmission of the pain message at the dorsal horn synapse Level 2: Descending inhibitionCentral Biasing Transmission of sensory input ot higher brain centers Transmission Cell Central Control + - + - Substantia gelitinosa + - A-beta fiber Afferents A-Delta & C fiber afferents

  37. Level 3: -Endorphin modulationEndogenous Opiate • Opiate like substance made by the body • Norepinephrine • Seratonin • These opiates inhibit the depolarization of second order nociceptive nerve fibers (thus no pain) • Found in substantia gelatinosa - activated in tract • Causes degeneration of prostaglandin and dorsal horn inhibition

  38. The purpose of knowing all the pain control theories is to use modalities to assess these pain theories and decrease the athlete/patient’s pain

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