Pain
Pain
Pain
Physiology III
Sec 2 Group c
Hossam Al Din Ayman Mohamed Abd elsamea Dwidar Tarek moataz Abo Elyazid
392100267 392100271 392000290
Over
v i eChemicals
w that cause pain
Types of pain
•The five most common types of pain are: Chemical substances produced by the body
Acute pain , Chronic pain , Neuropathic pain , that excite pain receptors
Nociceptive pain and Radicular pain include bradykinin, serotonin, and
histamine.
Pain system
Nociceptive pain occurs in 5 phases: 1) Transduction, 2) Conduction, 3)
Transmission, 4) Modulation, 5) Perception.
1.Transduction begins when peripheral terminals of nociceptive C fibers and A-delta (Aδ) fibers
are depolarized by noxious mechanical, thermal, or chemical energy. The membranes of these
terminals contain proteins and voltage-gated ion channels that convert thermal, mechanical,
or chemical energy into an action potential (AP). Nociceptor terminals are spread densely
throughout the skin. They are found less on periosteum, joints, tendons, muscles, and least on
the surface of organs.
Normally, nociceptor terminals have a high activation threshold. They requiring
intense stimulation to generate an AP.
For example, thermal nociceptors are only activated by temperature extremes
(>45°C or < 5°C).
Pain system
PAIN PROCESSING IN BRAIN
The advances in neuroimaging techniques seen within the past 2 decades have led to a virtual explosion
in the numbers of studies on the human brain’s activity under conditions of acute pain and chronic pain.
These noninvasive techniques have provided corroborative evidence that brain regions found to
contribute to pain processing and modulation by pharmacologic or electrophysiologic means in animal
studies correspond to regions of the human brain that are responsive to pain. In addition, these
investigations have also shown that pain activates a network of brain regions affecting somatosensory
and emotional aspects.
The Gate Control Theory of Pain is a mechanism, in the spinal cord, in which
pain signals can be sent up to the brain to be processed to accentuate the
possible perceived pain, or attenuate it at the spinal cord itself. The 'gate' is the
mechanism where pain signals can be let through or restricted.
Specificity theory is one of the first modern theories for pain. It holds
that specific pain receptors transmit signals to a "pain center" in the brain that
produces the perception of painVon Frey (1895) argued that the body has a
separate sensory system for perceiving pain—just as it does for hearing and
vision.
Theories of pain
First, conceptualized in the fourth century BCE by Plato in his oeuvre
Timaeus (Plato 1998), the theory defines pain, not as a unique sensory
experience but rather, as an emotion that occurs when a stimulus is
stronger than usual. This theory is based on Aristotle’s concept that pain
resulted from excessive stimulation of the sense of touch. Both stimulus
intensity and central summation are critical determinants of pain. It was
implied that the summation occurred in the dorsal horn cells.