What is pain?
An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential issue damage, or described in terms of such damage Treating pain is humane and has many benefits
What are the benefits of treating pain for the patient?
– Physical • Improved sleep, better appetite • Fewer medical complications (e.g. heart attack, pneumonia) – Psychological • Reduced suffering • Less depression, anxiety
What are the benefits of treating pain for the family?
What are the benefits of treating pain for society?
– Lower health costs (e.g. shorter hospital stay) – Able to contribute to the community
What are the 3 main questions for pain?
How can you class pain?
Duration Cause Mechanism
What are the duration classes of pain?
What are the cause classes of pain?
Cancer Non cancer
What are the mechanism classes of pain?
Nociceptive Neuropathic
How are acute and chronic pain different?
• Acute – Pain of recent onset and probable limited duration • Chronic – Pain lasting for more than 3 months – Pain lasting afternormal healing – Often no identifiable cause
How are cancer and non cancer pain different?
• Cancer pain – Progressive – May be mixture of acute and chronic • Non-cancer pain – Many different causes – Acute or chronic
What is nociceptive pain?
• Obvious tissue injury or illness • Also called physiological or inflammatory pain • Protective function • Description – Sharp ± dull – Well localised
What is neuropathic pain?
• Nervous system damage or abnormality • Tissue injury may not be obvious • Does not have a protecve function • Description – Burning, shooting ± numbness, pins and needles – Not well localised
What is acute non cancer pain?
• Examples – Fracture, appendici9s • Symptom of tissue injury or illness • Usually nociceptive • Occasionally neuropathic (e.g. sciatica)
What is chronic non cancer pain?
• Examples – Chronic back pain, arthritis • Injury may not be obvious • Complex, may be mixed nociceptive and neuropathic • Does not respond to usual drug treatment
What is cancer pain?
• Examples – Uterine cervical cancer, breast cancer • Features of acute and chronic pain – May be acute on chronic • Often mixed nociceptive and neuropathic pain • Usually gets worse over time if untreated
What is the difference between nociception and pain?
• Nociception – How signals get from the site of injury to the brain • Pain perception – How we “feel” pain
What is nociception in reference to pain?
What is the gross physioogy of pain?
4 steps:
What happens in the periphery in pain sensation?
What happens in the spinal cord in a pain response?
What happens in the brain when feeling pain?
– Cortex
– Limbic system
– Brainstem
• Pain perception occurs in the cortex
What does modulation do in the pain pathway?
Why might placebo treatment be helpful?
– Psychological factors are very important.
• Different treatments work on different parts of the pathway.
– More than one treatment may be needed.