Transcript Pain
Chapter 10:
Tissue Response to
Injury
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The Healing Process
Essential for athletic trainer to possess in
depth knowledge of healing process
Three Phases:
1. Inflammatory Response
2. Fibroblastic Repair Phase
3. Maturation- Remodeling Phase
Healing is a continuum
Can not speed up the process but one can
impede it
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Figure 10-1
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Inflammatory Response
Phase
Once tissue is injured- the process of
healing begins immediately
Cardinal Signs of Inflammation (caused
by damged tissue)
Rubor (redness)
Tumor (swelling)
Color (heat)
Dolor (pain)
Functio laesa (loss of function)
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Phase I: Inflammatory
Response Phase
Injury results in altered metabolism and
liberation of various materials
Initial reaction by leukocytes and
phagocytic cells
Goal
Protect
Localize
Decrease
injurious agents
Prepare for healing and repair
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Chemical Mediators
Derived from invading organisms, damaged tissue,
plasma enzyme systems and white blood cells
(WBC’s)
Histamine (from mast cells)
Causes vasodilatation and changes cell permeability
owing to swelling
Leukotrienes & prostaglandins: Impact margination
(adherence along cell walls)
Increase permeability locally for fluid and protein
passage (diapedesis)
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QUESTION
What are the 5 cardinal signs of
inflammation?
What are the goals during the
inflammatory phase?
Vascular Response
Vasoconstriction (decrease in diameter of
blood vessel) and coagulation occur to seal
blood vessels and chemical mediators are
released
Followed by vasodilation (increase in
diameter of blood vessel) 5-10 minutes
later
Initially
increases blood flow (transitory)
Swelling
WBC’s able to adhere to walls
Initial effusion of blood and plasma lasts 24-36
hours
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Figure 10-3
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QUESTION
What happens to the vascular system
during the Inflammatory Phase?
Clot Formation
Platelets adhere to exposed collagen
leading to formation of plug (clot)
Clots obstruct lymphatic fluid drainage and
aid in localizing injury
Requires conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin
Initial
stage: thromboplastin is formed
Second stage: Prothrombin is converted to
thrombin due to interaction with thromboplastin
Third stage: thrombin changes from soluble
fibrinogen to insoluble fibrin coagulating into a
network localizing the injury
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Figure 10-2
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Chronic Inflammation
Occurs when acute inflammatory response does
not eliminate injuring agent
Tissue
not restored to normal physiologic state
Involves replacement of leukocytes with
macrophages, lymphocytes and plasma cells
As
inflammation persists necrosis and fibrosis prolong
healing process
Granulation and fibrotic tissue continue to develop
within highly vascular and loose connective tissue.
Cause for shift from acute to chronic is unknown
Typically
associated with overuse, overload,
cumulative microtrauma
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SCENARIO- INFLAMMATORY
Phase II: Fibroblastic Repair
Phase
Scar formation (begins within the first few
days and last as long as 4- 6 weeks)
Patient has complaints of pain and
tenderness gradually subside during
this period
Persistent inflammation = extended
fibroplasia
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Figure 10-2
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Phase III: Maturation &
Remodeling
Long-term process, may require several
years to complete
Realignment of collagen relative to applied
tensile forces
Continued breakdown and synthesis of
collagen = increased strength
Tissue will gradually assume normal
appearance
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Figure 10-2
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Role of Progressive Mobilization
Initially must maintain some immobilization
in order to allow for initial healing during
Inflammation Phase
As healing moves into repair phase
controlled activity should be added
Work
towards regaining normal flexibility and
strength
Protective bracing should also be incorporated
During remodeling aggressive ROM and
strength exercises should be incorporated
Facilitates
remodeling and realignment
Must be aware of pain and other clinical
signs – may be too much too soon
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Factors That Impede Healing
Extent of injury:
macrotears (acute) vs microtears
(chronic)
Edema (swelling)
Hemorrhage
(bleeding)
Poor Vascular
Supply
Separation of
Tissue (smooth vs jagged
edge)
Muscle Spasm
Atrophy
Corticosteroids
Keloids and
Hypertrophic
Scars
Infection
Humidity, Climate,
Oxygen Tension
Health, Age, and
Nutrition
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SCENARIO- MATURATIONREMODELING PHASE
Tissues of the Body
Bone - not classified as soft tissue
4 types of soft tissue
1. Epithelial tissue
Skin,
vessel & organ linings
2. Connective tissue
Tendons,
ligaments, cartilage, fat, blood, and
bone
3. Muscle tissue
Skeletal,
smooth, cardiac muscle
4. Nerve tissue
Brain,
spinal cord & nerves
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Cartilage Healing
Limited capacity to heal
Little or no direct blood supply
If area involves subchondral bone
(enhanced blood supply) granulation
tissue is present and healing proceeds
normally
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Ligament Healing
Follows similar healing course as other
vascular tissues
Proper care will result in acute, repair, and
remodeling phases in same time required
by other vascular tissues
Repair phase will involve random laying
down of collagen which, as scar forms, will
mature and realign in reaction to joint
stresses and strain
Full healing may require 12 months
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Factors affecting ligament healing
Surgically repaired ligaments tend to be
stronger due to decreased scar formation
With intra-articular tears (inside the joint
capsule) synovial fluid prevents clotting
and spontaneous healing
Exercised ligaments are stronger
Exercise
vs. Immobilization
Muscles must be strengthened to reinforce
the joint
Increased
tension will increase joint stability
since ligament is more lax
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Skeletal Muscle Healing
Collagen will mature and orient along lines
of tension
Healing could last 6-8 weeks depending
on muscle injured
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Tendon Healing
Requires dense fibrous union of separated
ends
Abundance of collagen is required for
good tensile strength
Too much = fibrosis – may interfere with
gliding
Initially injured tendon will adhere to
surrounding tissues (week 2)
Week 3 – tendon will gradually separate
Tissue not strong enough until weeks 4-5
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Nerve Healing
Nerve cell cannot regenerate after injury
Regeneration can take place within a
nerve fiber
Proximity of injury to nerve cell makes
regeneration more difficult
For regeneration, optimal environment is
required
Rate of healing occurs at 3-4 mm per day
Injured central nervous system nerves do
not heal as well as peripheral nerves
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Modifying Soft-Tissue
Healing
Blood supply and nutrients is necessary
for all healing
Healing in older patients or those with
poor diets may take longer
Certain organic disorders (blood
conditions) may slow or inhibit the
healing process
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Management Concepts
Drug utilization
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents
(NSAID’s)
Medications will work to decrease
vasodilatation and capillary permeability
Concerns may interfere with Inflammatory
Phase
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Therapeutic Modalities
Thermal agents are utilized
Heat
facilitates acute inflammation
Cold is utilized to slow inflammatory process
Electrical modalities
Treatment
of inflammation
Ultrasound, microwave, electrical stimulation
(includes transcutaneous electrical muscle
stimulation and electrical muscle stimulation)
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Therapeutic Exercise
Major aim involves pain free movement,
full strength, power, and full extensibility of
associated muscles
Immobilization, while sometimes
necessary, can have a negative impact on
an injury
Adverse
biochemical changes can occur in
collagen
Early mobilization (that is controlled) may
enhance healing
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PART II
Bone Healing
Follows same three phases of soft
tissue healing
Less complex process
Acute fractures have 5 stages
Hematoma formation
Cellular proliferation
Callus formation
Ossification
Remodeling
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Figure 10-6 A: Blood vessels broken, forms a hematoma B:
Blood vessels grow into the fracture, soft callus C:
Fibrocartilage becomes ossified forms a bony cartilage D:
Osteoclasts remove excess tissue
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Hematoma Formation
Trauma to the periosteum and
surrounding soft tissue occurs due to the
initial bone trauma
During the first 48 hours a hematoma
within the medullary cavity and the
surrounding tissue develops
Blood supply is disrupted by clotting
vessels and cellular debris
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Hard callus becomes more well-formed
as osteoblasts lay down cancellous
bone, replacing cartilage
With crystallization of callus remodeling
begins
Less than ideal immobilization produces
a cartilaginous union instead of a bony
union
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Ossification is complete when bone has
been laid down and the excess callus
has been resorbed by osteoclasts
Bone continually adapts to applied
stresses
Balance between osteoblast and
osteoclast activity
Time required is dependent on various
factors
Severity and site of fracture
Age and extent of trauma
Time will range from 3-8 weeks
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Acute Fracture Management
Must be appropriately immobilized, until Xrays reveal the presence of a hard callus
Fractures can limit participation for weeks
or months
A clinician must be certain that the following
areas do not interfere with healing
Poor blood supply
Poor immobilization
Infection
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Poor blood supply
Bone may die and union/healing will not
occur (avascular necrosis)
Common sites include:
Head
of femur, navicular of the wrist, talus, and
isolated bone fragments
Relatively rare in healthy, young athletes
except in navicular of the wrist
Poor immobilization
Result of poor casting allowing for motion
between bone parts
May prevent proper union or result in bony
deformity
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Infection
May interfere with normal healing,
particularly with compound fractures
Severe streptococcal and staphylococcal
infections
Modern antibiotics has reduced the risk of
infections
Closed fractures are not immune to
infections within the body or blood
If soft tissue alters bone positioning,
surgery may be required to ensure
proper union
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Healing of Stress Fractures
Result of cyclic forces, axial compression
or tension from muscle pulling
Electrical potential of bone changes
relative to stress (compression, tension, or
torsional)
Constant stress axially or through muscle
activity can impact bone resorption,
leading to microfracture
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If osteoclastic activity is not in balance
with osteoblastic activity bone becomes
more susceptible to fractures
Management: Decreased activity and
elimination of factors causing excess
stress will be necessary to allow for
appropriate bone remodeling
To treat stress fractures a balance
between osteoblast and osteoclast activity
must be restored
Early recognition is necessary to prevent
complete cortical fractures
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What are the 4 Conditions that
may interfere with fracture
healing?
Poor Blood Supply
Poor Immobilization
Infection
Soft Tissues between severed ends of
bone
Pain
Major indicator of injury
Pain is individual and subjective
ATC needs to have balance between pain
and progression
Factors involved in pain
Anatomical structures
Physiological reactions
Psychological, social, cultural and cognitive
factors
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Scenario- Fracture Healing
Pain Categories
Pain sources
Fast versus slow pain
Acute versus chronic
Projected or referred pain
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Pain sources
Cutaneous pain: is sharp, bright and
burning with fast and slow onset
(lacerations, burns, bumps)
Deep somatic pain: originates in tendons,
muscles, joints, periosteum and blood
vessels
Visceral pain: begins in organs and is
diffused at first and may become localized
(appendix)
Psychogenic pain: is felt by the individual
but is emotional rather than physical
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What are the 4 Pain Sources?
Cutaneous
Deep somatic
Visceral
Pyschogenic
Acute versus Chronic Pain
Acute pain is less than six months in
duration
Chronic pain last longer than six months
Chronic pain classified by International
Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) as
pain continuing beyond normal healing time
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Referred Pain
Pain which occurs away from actual site of
injury/irritation
Unique to each individual and case
May elicit motor and/or sensory response
Three types of referred pain include:
myofascial, sclerotomic, and dermatomic
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Myofascial Pain
Trigger points or small hyperirritable areas
within muscle resulting in bombardment of
CNS
Acute and chronic pain can be associated
with myofascial points
Active points cause obvious complaint
Trigger points do not follow patterns
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Nociception: Pain receptors
Pain receptors -free nerve endings
sensitive to extreme mechanical,
thermal and chemical energy
Located in meninges, periosteum, skin,
teeth, and some organs
Afferent nerve fibers: transmit nerve
fibers towards the spinal cord
Efferent nerve fibers: transmit nerve
fibers from the spinal cord to the
periphery
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Facilitators and Inhibitors of
Synaptic Transmission
Nervous system is electrochemical in nature
Chemicals called neurotransmitters are
released by pre-synaptic cell to transmit
message
Two types mediate pain
Endorphins
Serotonin
Neurotransmitters release stimulated by
noxious stimuli- resulting in activation of pain
inhibition transmission
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Mechanisms of Pain
Control:
Three Models or Theories
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1. Gate Theory
Sensory information from cutaneous
receptors enters the spinal cord
Pain simultaneously travels along A-delta
and c-fibers
Sensory information overrides pain
information, closing gate, Pain message
never received
Gate control occurs at the level of the
spinal cord
Example:
When you bump your head you rub
it . Why?
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Gate
Control
Theory
Figure 10-7
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Descending
Pathway Pain
Control
Figure 10-8
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2. Central Biasing (Descending
pathway)
Stimulation of descending pathways used
to inhibit pain transmission
Involves release of enkephalin and
norepinephrine release in dorsal horn
blocking and inhibiting synaptic
transmission
The
pain from the cut on your hand eventually
subsides or reduces to a lower intensity.
If you consciously distract yourself, you don't
think about the pain and it bothers you less.
People given placebos for pain control often
report that the pain ceases or diminishes.
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Release of
β -Endorphins
Figure 10-9
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3. Release of B-endorphins
•
•
•
•
•
Noxious stimuli can trigger endorphin
release
Stimulation of pain sensory fibers required
Causes release from hypothalamus
Strong analgesic effects
IE: acupuncture, acupressure, runner’s
high
Pain assessment: subjective
Self report is the best reflection of pain and
discomfort
Utilize multi- and uni-dimensional
questionnaires
Assessment techniques include:
Visual
analog scales (0-10, marked no pain to
severe pain)
Pain charts: Location and scale
McGill Pain questionnaire: 78 words may take
20 minutes
Activity pain indicator profiles: housework,
running
Numeric rating scale: Verbal
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Visual Analog Scale
Pain chart. Use the following instructions: “Please use all of the figures to show me exactly where all
your pains are, and where they radiate to. Shade or draw with blue marker. Only the athlete is to
fill out this sheet. Please be as precise and detailed as possible. Use yellow marker for numbness
and tingling. Use red marker for burning or hot areas, and green marker for cramping. Please
remember: blue = pain, yellow = numbness and tingling, red = burning or hot areas, green =
cramping.” Used with permission from Melzack R: Pain measurement and assessment, New York,
1983, Raven Press.
Treating Pain
Modalities
Must have clear rationale for use
Used to relieve pain and control other
signs and symptoms of injury/surgery
Must use in conjunction with exercise
Induced analgesia
Introduce
thermal agents for pain control
Utilize electrical modalities to reduce pain
TENS, superficial heat/cold, massage used to
target Gate Theory
Acupuncture, electrical stimulation, deep
massage used to stimulate endorphin release
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Pharmacological Agents
Oral, injectable medications
Commonly analgesics and antiinflammatory agents
Important to work with referring physician
or pharmacist to ensure patient is taking
appropriate medications
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Psychological Aspects of
Pain
Pain can be subjective and psychological
Pain thresholds vary per individual
Pain is often worse at night due to solitude and
absence of external distractions
Personality differences can also have an impact
Patients, through conditioning, are often able to
endure pain and block sensations of minor
injuries
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