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Pain, Temperature, Sleep, and Sensory Function

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Title: Pain, Temperature, Sleep, and Sensory Function


1
Chapter 13
  • Pain, Temperature, Sleep, and Sensory Function

2
  • Pain
  • one of the bodys most important adaptive
    mechanisms
  • an unpleasant sensory or emotional experience
    associated with actual or potential tissue
    damage, or described in terms of such damage
    Amer. Pain Society
  • whatever the experiencing person says it is,
    existing whenever he says it does
  • - Margo McCaffrey

3
Pain
  • one person cannot judge the perception of pain
    in another
  • culture influences a peoples response to pain
  • pain occurs with tissue damage, there is no
    correlation between the amount of tissue damage
    and the degree of pain experienced

4
Pain
  • a clear distinction among pain types may not be
    always possible
  • Two major types Stimuli Table 13-1
  • 1.Nociceptive
  • A. somatic-joints, muscle, skin
  • B. visceral-organs(tumors/obstruction)
  • 2.Neuropathic
  • A. Central-central or peripheral NS
  • B. Peripheral-neuropathies(DM/GB disease)

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7
  • Neuroanatomy of Pain
  • Nociception
  • Afferent pathways peripheral (PNS) ? spinal
    gate (dorsal horn) ? higher centers (CNS)
  • Interpretive centers brain stem, midbrain,
    diencephalon and cerebral cortex
  • Efferent pathways CNS ? dorsal horn of spinal
    cord (modulate pain)

8
  • Nociceptors
  • free nerve ending
  • Free nerve endings in skin, muscle, joints,
    arteries, and the viscera that respond to
    chemical, mechanical, and thermal stimuli
  • Can detect a wide range of stimuli
  • A delta fibers touch, vibration, thermal pain
  • Unmyelinated C polymodal fibers pain

9
The Integumentary System
  • Skin and its accessory structures
  • structure
  • function
  • growth and repair
  • development
  • aging
  • disorders

10
Nociception Pain Transmission
  • 1.Transduction
  • 2.Transmission
  • 3.Perception
  • 4.Modulation

11
Transduction tissue damage
  • Sensitizing substsnces
  • Prostaglandins, bradykinin, serotonin, substance
    P, histamine
  • Action potential
  • wave of depolarization

12
Transmission
  • Tissue damage
  • Spinal cord
  • Brain stem thalamus
  • cortex

13
Perception of Pain
  • conscious experience of pain

14
Modulation
  • inhibition of nociceptive impulses
  • Brain stem
  • Spinal cord
  • Endorphins, serotonin, NE

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  • Gate Control Theory Melzack Wall 1965
  • Small c fibers pain( diffuse,burning,aching)
  • Large A fibers touch, vibration or thermal
    stimulation(localized,sharp)-pain
  • Inhibitory interneurons dorsal horn
  • balance between c fibers and non-nocieptive A
    fibers(touch,vibration,thermal)

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  • Neuromodulation of Pain
  • Located in pathways of nervous system
  • Hypothalamus, pituitary gland, spinal cord, brain
  • Triggered by tissue injury/inflammation
  • Excitatory
  • Substance P, glutamate, somatostatin
  • Inhibitory
  • GABA, serotonin, norepinephrine, endorphins

19
PAINDescription
  • OLDCART
  • Oonset
  • Llocation
  • Dduration
  • Ccharacteristics (sharp,crampy,burning,dull)
  • Aaggravating/alleviating/associated
  • Rradiation
  • Ttreatment

20
  • Clinical Descriptions of Pain
  • Acute immediate, harmful alert, acute anxiety
    tissue damage, self-limiting, ends with healing
  • Somatic
  • superficial, sharp, well localized
  • dull, aching, poorly localized, nausea and
    vomiting
  • Visceral
  • internal organs, abdomen or skeleton, poorly
    localized (? receptors)
  • nausea and vomiting, hypotension, restlessness
    and shock

21
Acute Pain
  • generalized stress response
  • physiologic signs associated with pain
  • low/moderate/superf
    icial
  • sympathetic nervous system
  • HR, BP, RR, muscle tension, dilating
    pupils, diaphoresis

22
Acute Pain
  • Severe or deep pain
  • Parasympathetic nervous system
  • Pallor, muscle tension, HR, irreg RR, N/V,
    weakness exhaustion

23
  • Acute
  • Referred
  • Area distant from the point of origin, same
    spinal segment as the actual site of pain, more
    receptors in the skin

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Referred Pain
26
  • Chronic Pain-Neuropathic
  • lasting 3 to 6 months
  • Injury to the nervous system
  • Persistent (low back pain) or intermittent
    (migraines)
  • Produces significant behavior of psychologic
    changes
  • Types
  • Myofascial muscle, fascia
  • Chronic postoperative pain
  • Cancer pain (Chapter 10)

27
  • Neuropathic Pain
  • increased sensitivity to painful stimuli
  • do to abnormal processing of sensory input
  • Chronic
  • 1.Peripheral pain nerve entrapment or
    diabetic neuropathy
  • 2.Central lesion/dysfunction in the CNS
    phantom limb

28
  • Aging and Pain
  • Increase in pain threshold
  • Peripheral neuropathies
  • Skin thickness changes
  • Decrease pain tolerance
  • Alteration in metabolism of drugs and metabolites

29
  • Temperature Regulation
  • heat production ? heat conservation ? heat
    loss
  • Extremities are cooler than the core
  • Daily fluctuation (circadian rhythm)
  • (0.2 0.5 C)
  • Peak at 600 p.m.
  • Lowest with sleep

30
  • Hypothalamic Control conserve heat
  • Thermoreceptors
  • Peripheral skin
  • Central hypothalamus, cord, abdominal organs
  • 1.Endocrine System
  • TSH-RH ? Thyroxine ? adrenal ? Epinephrine
  • vasoconstriction, glycolysis ? metabolic
    rate ?? heat production
  • 2.Sympathetic Nervous System
  • ? skeletal muscle tone
  • Initiates shivering
  • Vasoconstriction
  • 3.Cerebral Cortex voluntary
  • ? body movement, bundle up, curl in a ball

31
  • Fever
  • resetting of the hypothalamic thermostat
  • Active heat production and conservation measures
    a new set point
  • Exogenous pyrogens (endotoxins)
  • Endogenous pyrogens TNF,IL-6,IF

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  • Benefits of Fever
  • Kills many microorganisms
  • ? serum levels of iron, zinc and copper
  • Needed for metabolism of bacteria
  • Promotes lysosomal breakdown and autodestruction
    of cells viral replication
  • ? lymphocytic transformation and phagocyte
    motility
  • Augments antiviral interferon production

34
  • Hyperthermia
  • Not mediated by pyrogens
  • No resetting of the hypothalamic set point
  • 41C (105.8F) nerve damage produces convulsions
  • 43C (109.4F) results in death
  • Forms
  • Heat Cramps fever, ? pulse, ? blood pressure
  • Heat Exhaustion dizziness, weakness, nausea,
    confusion and syncope
  • Heat Stroke core gt 40C-104F cerebral edema,
    degeneration of the CNS, renal tubular necrosis
    and death

35
Trauma and Temperature
  • Damage to the CNS,inflammation, increased
    intracranial pressure or intracranial bleeding
  • Body Temperaturegt 39/102.2 degrees
  • central fever
  • /- bradycardia
  • Resistant to antipyretic therapy

36
  • Malignant Hyperthermia
  • rare inherited muscle disorder
  • Precipitated by inhaled anesthetics and
    neuromuscular blocking agents
  • ? Ca release or ? Ca uptake with muscle
    contraction
  • Sustained muscle contraction (?O2 use, ? lactic
    acid)
  • Symptoms resemble those of coma with anuria
    (children and adolescents)

37
  • Hypothermia
  • Body temperature lt 35C
  • Produces
  • Depression of the CNS and respiratory systems,
    vasoconstriction, in microcirculation,
    coagulation and ischemic tissue damage
  • Severe ? ice crystals within the cells ? rupture
    and death

38
  • Sleep
  • temporary state of restful unconsciousness with
    spontaneous arousal
  • Two stages alternate
  • Rapid eye movement sleep (REM) dreams
  • Non-REM sleep
  • Stage I-IV

39
  • REM Sleep
  • 20 25 of sleep time
  • Paradoxic sleep EEG pattern awake very
    active brain
  • Occurs every 90 minutes beginning after 1-2 hours
    of sleep

40
  • Non-REM Sleep
  • 75 80 of sleep time
  • Initiated when inhibitory signals are released
    from the hypothalamus - ? parasympathetic tone
  • 4 stages - EEG

41
NREM SleepPET Scan
42
REM Sleep PET Scan
43
  • Sleep Disorders
  • Dyssomnias
  • Insomnia inability to fall or stay asleep (mild,
    moderate or severe)
  • Sleep disordered breathing obstructive sleep
    apnea syndrome
  • primary hypersomnia (narcolepsy)
  • Disorders of the sleep-wake schedule jet lag,
    sleep schedule

44
  • Sleep Disorders
  • Parasomnias unusual behavior during sleep
  • Sleepwalking, night terrors, rearranging
    furniture, eating food, violent behavior and
    restless leg syndrome

45
The Eye
46
  • Visual Dysfunction
  • Ocular movement III, IV, VI CN (Figure 12-22)
  • Strabismus
  • Diplopia (weak or hypertonic muscle)
  • Nystagmus
  • Pedular regular to-and-fro
  • Jerk one phase faster
  • Causes inner ear, cerebellum, CN, drugs, retinal
    disease, cervical cord disease

47
Strabismus
48
  • Dysfunction of Acuity
  • ability to see objects in sharp detail
  • Glaucoma - ? intraocular pressure (gt 12-20 mmHg)
    upon optic nerve ? death
  • Cataract cloudy or opaque area in ocular lens
  • Age-related macular degeneration loss of vision
    (risk factors HTN, cigarettes, DM)

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50
  • Alterations in Refractions
  • Myopia nearsightedness focus in front of the
    retina (long eyeball)
  • Hyperopia farsightedness focus behind retina
    (fat eyeball)
  • Astigmatism uneven corneal curvature no
    single retinal focus

51
Alterations in Refraction
52
LASIK Surgery
53
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54
The Ear
55
  • Auditory Dysfunction
  • 5 - 10 population has impaired hearing
  • Conductive change in outer or middle ear
    impairs conduction
  • Impacted cerumen, foreign bodies, tumors (middle
    ear, canal), eustachian tube, otitis media
  • Sensorineural impairment of the organ of Corti
    or its central connections
  • Congenital, noise, aging, meniere's disease,
    ototoxicity, systemic disease (syphilis,
    diabetes, others), and neoplasms.

56
The Ear
57
  • Ear Infections
  • Otitis externa
  • Infection of the outer ear
  • Prolonged moisture exposure (swimmers ear) and
    bacteria
  • Otitis media infants and children
  • Acute pain, fever, inflamed TM with middle ear
    fluid
  • With effusion fluid in middle ear without
    symptoms

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59
Aging and Change in Hearing
  • Page 340 Geriatrtic Considerations

60
  • Olfaction and Taste
  • Olfaction (smell) CN I
  • Taste (gustation) CN VII IX
  • Strong relationship between taste and smell
  • Sour, salt, sweet, bitter, umami

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Taste Buds Cranial Nerves
  • Umami?

63
Taste Bud
64
  • Olfaction and Taste Dysfunctions
  • Olfactory ( 7 classes)
  • Hyposmia impaired
  • Anosmia loss
  • Hallucinations odors not present
  • Parosmia - abnormal
  • Taste (5 classes)
  • Hypogeusia - ? taste
  • Ageusia absence of taste
  • Dysgeusia unpleasant flavor
  • Page 341

65
  • Somatosensory Function
  • Touch
  • 4 afferent fiber types touch, vibration
    pressure, stretch, joint position
  • Fusion of intensity, location and duration of
    stimulus to higher CNS centers
  • Proprioception body position
  • Depends upon inner ear, vision, and receptors in
    joints and ligaments

66
  • Proprioceptive Dysfunction
  • Vestibular nystagmus
  • eyeball movement 2 to overstimulation of the
    semicircular canals
  • Vertigo
  • spinning sensation 2 to inflammation of the
    semicircular canals
  • Menieres disease
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