Transcript PAIN
DENT/OBHS 131
Neuroscience
PAIN!
!!
2009
Pain….
Is a submodality of somatosensation
Is the perception of unpleasant or aversive
stimulation (sensory and emotional
experience)
Warns of injury (physiological relevance)
Is highly individual and subjective
General topics
Brief review of somatosensation
Anatomical pathways
Substance P
Nociceptors
Gating theory
Descending control
Opioids / morphine
Placebo effects
Learning Objectives
Describe the course of the spinothalamic (and trigeminal) tract(s) from
dermatome to cortex
Describe the types of fibers carrying pain information, including their
relative conduction velocities, substances they release and where they
terminate in the spinal cord and periphery
Discuss how the major types of nociceptors respond to damage / injury
Know that other ascending pathways are involved in pain transmission
Discuss the descending regulation of noxious information signaling
Explain how ascending pain information is “gated” in the spinal cord
Dual ascending sensory pathways
Dorsal columns / ML
Anterolateral system
Several distinct pathways
convey different aspects of
pain - see later
e.g. spinothalamic awareness and location of
pain
Pain and temperature
Small DRG processes enter the cord:,
Afferents
Lissauer’s
tract
Sub P
Superficial layers
of dorsal horn
Ventral White
Commissure (VWC)
III
synapse in the substantia gelatinosa,
then cross in the VWC and ascend.
Learning Objective #2
Describe the types of fibers carrying pain
information, including their relative
conduction velocities, substances they
release and where they terminate in the
spinal cord and periphery
C fibers use two transmitters:
substance P and glutamate
Substance P
released with
strong stimuli
Act to enhance
and prolong the
action of
glutamate acting
on AMPA
receptors
Afferent termination in dorsal horn
Many nociceptive fibers
terminate in layer I
(marginal layer) and II
(substantia gelatinosa) of
dorsal horn of spinal cord
Some pain and nonnoxious sensory (e.g.,
proprioception) into other
layers (including ventral
horn - important for
reflexes)
Conduction velocities
Nociceptive afferents
in peripheral nerve
Fast sharp pain and
slow dull burning pain
myelination & axon
diameter
Nociceptors are free nerve endings
Learning Objective #3
Discuss how the major types of
nociceptors respond to damage / injury
Nociceptors
Harmful stimuli activate nociceptors
Nociceptors are peripheral free endings of
primary sensory DRG and trigeminal ganglia
neurons
Membrane contains receptors
Classes (all located in skin and deep tissues)
Thermal - extreme temperatures – A fibers
Mechanical - intense pressure – A fibers - sharp pain
Polymodal - intense mechanical, chemical or thermal
stimuli – C fibers (unmyelinated) – dull burning
Chemical nociceptors
1. Damaged cells (endothelial / platelets) - release chemicals:
activate & sensitize (HYPERALGESIA)
free nerve endings
2. local & central effects
arachidonic acid
cyclo-oxygenase
(ASPIRIN)
3. vasodilation / extravasation
(neurogenic inflammation)
Thermal nociceptors…
…..are a separate group
(interestingly including the
heat-sensitive capsaicin
receptor ) and are members of
the transient receptor
potential (TRP) gene family
(non-selective cation channel)
Activated by extreme temp:
< 5 C or > 45 C
Pain & Temperature (STT)
pictured are “normal”
thermoreceptors (also free
nerve endings)
Mechanical nociceptors……
…….are activated by very strong stimuli
Sensitization of nociceptors
Pain pathways sensitize!!!!!
After tissue damage, the sensation to pain to subsequent
stimuli is increased at primary site of injury
Occurs in primary and secondary (surrounding) areas
Thresholds decrease or magnitude of pain from
suprathreshold stimuli increases - HYPERALGESIA
Painful response to otherwise innocuous mechanical
stimulus - ALLODYNIA
With severe persistent injury, C fibers fire repetitively or
“wind up” resulting in increased glutamate release in spinal
cord that activates NMDA receptors – synaptic plasticity
Learning Objective #1
Describe the course of the spinothalamic
(and trigeminal) tract(s) from dermatome
to cortex
Spinothalamic
Cross
Direct to multiple
thalamus
Pain pathways through thalamus
VPL / VPM (neospinothalamic)
receive nociceptive specific and other sensory inputs
spinothalamic tract (STT & TTT)
project to primary somatosensory cortex
neurons have small receptive fields - injury location
Intralaminar complex (paleospinalthalamic)
receive nociceptive specific inputs
Includes projections from the spinoreticulothalamic tract
diffuse cortical projections
Learning Objective #4
Know that other ascending pathways are
involved in pain transmission
Ascending pain pathways
Spinoreticular tract; to reticular formation of
pons / medulla (level of attention); and onto
thalamus
Spinomesencephalic tract; to mesencephalic
reticulum, lateral periqaueductal grey in
midbrain; and on to hypothalamus and limbic
system (emotion and memory integration)
Spinoreticular
Collaterals - medulla
Synapses - pons
Spinoreticulothalamic
tract
Spinomesencephalic
Synapse - midbrain
Descending control
Learning Objective #5
Discuss the descending regulation of
noxious information signaling
Descending
control
Direct stimulation of
PAG - specifically
reduces sensation of
pain
Other transmitters
Descending
pathways
can regulate
relay of
nociceptive
information
in the spinal
cord
NA
(opioids)
5-HT
opioids
Local circuit interneurons…..
…in the spinal cord:
integration of
ascending and
descending
information to
modulate
nociception
Placebo effect
Learning Objective #6
Explain how ascending pain information
is “gated” in the spinal cord
Gating control hypothesis of pain
Cortical representation of pain
VPL / VPM project to primary somatosensory cortex and
then to secondary somatosensory cortex:
Awareness, location and “intensity” of pain
Medial thalamus projects to anterior insular cortex:
Autonomic / visceral component of pain
Intralaminar nuclei of medial thalamus projects to
anterior cingulate cortex (limbic association cortex):
Emotional component of pain (circuit of Papez)
Referred pain
Silent nociceptors:
normally not active
but firing threshold
reduced by various
insults
Convergence of somatic and visceral afferents on lamina V