What is the definition of pain?
an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described of in terms of such damage
What is the term for a non-conscious neural traffic originating with trauma or potential trauma tissue?
nociception
What’s the difference between acute and chronic pain?
What does the Gate Control Theory suggest?
Where is this “gate”?
this theory proposes that pain is not just a direct result of injury but is modulated at the spinal cord level, like a “gate” that can open or close to let pain signals reach the brain
“gate” is in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
What factors “open” the gate in the Gate Control theory?
What factors “close” the gate?
What is Phantom Pain? What occurs in this phenomenon?
What does the Fear-Avoidance Model suggest?
Fill in the gaps:
Fear of pain develops as a result of a __1__ interpretation of __2__ as threatening, known as “__3__” and this fear affects __4__ processes, also known as __5__ and leads to __6__ behaviours, followed by disability, disuse, and depression.
What does Pain Catastophising cause?
What does the term Pain and Gain imply?
means that experiencing or expressing pain can sometimes bring benefits—either to the person in pain or to others around them
“Pain” = the unpleasant experience.
“Gain” = the advantage or reward that comes from it
How many types of gain are there and what is the behaviour/outcome of each?
What is the difference between the Placebo Effect and the Nocebo Effect?
Placebo effect: Positive outcomes from expecting a benefit. Your brain thinks something will help, and it actually reduces symptoms or improves feeling, even if the treatment is inactive (like a sugar pill).
Nocebo effect: Negative outcomes from expecting harm or side effects. Your brain anticipates something bad, and you feel worse or develop symptoms, even if the treatment is harmless.
What is the role of antidepressants such as amitriptyline in pain management?
What are the main analgesics in clinical use?
What are the 3 major classes of opioid receptors?
What is the mechanism of action of exogenous opiates?
mu, delta, kappa
What are the signs of potential dependence?
What are some non-pharmacological interventions for pain management?
What is the most common pain management program and what does it focus on?
Define the following:
What is CBT? What does it focus on?
List 5 facts about CBT.
What are the 3 levels of thoughts?
List some strengths and weaknesses of CBT.