Pain Pathways Introduction
Pain Pathways Introduction
Pain Pathways Introduction
C fibres are unmyelinated and are also the smallest type of primary
afferent fibre. Hence they demonstrate the slowest conduction. C
fibres are polymodal, responding to chemical, mechanical and
thermal stimuli. C fibre activation leads to slow, burning pain.
A fibres
Large
Highly
> 40 ms-1
A fibres
Small 2-5m
Thinly
5-15ms-1
Diameter
Myelination
Conduction
velocity
Receptor
Low
High and low
activation
thresholds
Sensation on
Light touch,
Rapid, sharp,
stimulation
non-noxious
localised pain
Table 1 Characteristics of primary afferent fibres
C fibres
Smallest <2m
Unmyelinated
< 2ms-1
High
Slow, diffuse, dull
pain
Visceral pain
Visceral pain is pain arising from the internal organs. The viscera are largely
innervated by C fibres. Visceral pain is typically diffuse and poorly localised,
often described as deep, dull or dragging. It can be associated with autonomic
changes such as nausea, vomiting, and changes in heart rate or blood
pressure. It can also evoke strong emotional responses.
In contrast to somatic pain, which is felt due to stimuli such as burning or
crushing, visceral pain is triggered by smooth muscle distension or
contraction, stretching of the capsule surrounding an organ, ischaemia and
necrosis, or irritation by chemicals produced during inflammatory processes.
Referred pain is pain experienced at a site distant from source of the pain. It is
due to the convergence of different afferents on to the same dorsal horn
neurones in the spinal cord. For example shoulder pain can be felt due to
diaphragmatic irritation that occurs following laparoscopic surgery that can
stretch the diaphragm.
Neuropathic pain
Neuropathic pain is caused by damage to nerves in the central or peripheral
nervous system. Damage can be due a number of mechanisms including
trauma or surgery, diabetes mellitus, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, ischaemia,
infection or malignancy.
Definition
An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience
associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or
described in terms of such damage
Nociceptor
A high-threshold sensory receptor of the peripheral
somatosensory nervous system that is capable of
transducing and encoding noxious stimuli
Hyperalgesia
Increased pain from a stimulus that normally provokes
pain
Neuropathic pain
Pain caused by a lesion or disease of the
somatosensory nervous system
Allodynia
Pain due to a stimulus that does not normally provoke
pain
Sensitization
Increased responsiveness of nociceptive neurons to
their normal input, and/or recruitment of a response to
normally subthreshold inputs
Table 2 Useful definitions (Source: International Association for the Study of
Pain)
Conclusion
Pain is both a sensory and emotional experience, and patients past
experiences, fears and anxieties can play an important role. Pain transmission
is a result of complex peripheral and central processes. These processes can
be modulated at different levels and pain perception is a result of the balance
between facilitatory and inhibitory interactions.
Current areas of interest in pain research include investigating the effect of
mood on pain processing in the brain and looking for novel drugs to block
channels involved in pain transmission.
Key points
1 The pain experienced by patients is a result of the interaction between
sensory and emotional experiences.
2 A fibres transmit rapid, sharp, localised pain.
3 C fibres transmit slow, diffuse, dull pain.
4 Pain transmission can be modulated at a number of levels, including the
dorsal horn of the spinal cord and via descending inhibitory pathways.
5 The spinothalamic and spinoreticular tracts are important ascending pain
pathways
6 Neuropathic pain can be spontaneous and is often described as burning,
shooting, or stabbing