A11MD4: Summary- Week 1
signs of meningeal irritation
Kernig's positive due to hamstring spasm, Neck stiffness- unable to put chin on chest Brudzinskis sign- Flexing the patient's neck causes flexion of the patient's hips and knees
major area of thalamus involved in somatosensory pathway
VPL
thalamus nuclei
VPL nucleus of thalamus- indicated in dark blue
dopamine pathway structure
VTA is a major neurone that terminates within the nucleus accumbens and releases dopamine. this impacts hippocampus, straitum and frontal cortex and contributes to a constellation of emotions e.g. reward, pleasure, euphoria
causes of direct transverse myelitis**
VZV, borrelia, HTLV-1 thoracic cord
types of transverse myelitis**
Vasculitis of anterior spinal artery Direct invasion of cord
common pathologies of vessels
arterial thrombus (stroke) berry aneurysms venous sinus thrombosis
NSAIDs used to treat pain in
arthritis pain muscular pain skeletal pain toothache headache
encephalomyelitis-causing organisms that enter s.c.
arthropod -borne viruses, Ricketsii, Trypanosomes
clinical use of NSAIDs
as analgesics reduce chronic/ acute inflammation decrease temp in fever
how to identify the cingulate sulcus
first sulcus above corpus chisum
ascending myelitis causes
flaccid paralysis sensory loss
anterior horn cell myelitis causes
flaccid paralysis muscle pain no sensory or bladder dysfunction
mechanism of action of glucocorticoids
inhibit induction of enzyme
unilateral damage to frontal lobe leads to diffuclties
inhibiting saying/ doing something inappropriate
inhibition vs excitation of inhibition
inhibition involves promoting the movement of chloride ions into cell inhibiting excitation involves inhibiting sodium influx into cell
from confluence
leads to the large transverse sinus 2, one on each hemisphere runs around cerebellum drains into sigmoid sinus
corresponding genotype to UM
multiple copies of a functional allele/ allele that confers increased gene transcription
complications of drug addiction
multiple pathways
all changers in DNA arise from
mutations
genetic mutation associated with common migraine
mutations in TRESK K2P potassium channel
cerebellum
responsible for dynamic co-ordation of movement feeds back with our spinal cord co-oridation and synchronisation of mm
where does blood travel from the IJV
rest of circulation
incomplete reflex called
retching
target site for general anaesthetics
reticular activating system that is involved in arousal, sleep and wakefulness
cocaine blocks
reuptake of dopamine
contraindications when treating meningitis with steroids
risk of GI bleeding
polymorphism leads to a 20-40% increase in?
risk of a disease e.g. heart disease, Alzheimer's
which is the executive system of mode of action
route B- supervisory attention system
what happens once one mode of action has been selected
the other response is inhibited
oil-gas partition coefficient is associated with
the potency of the anaesthetic
what is retching described as
the preliminary phase to vomiting
generation of eicosanoids from AA is dependent on
the release of AA from phospholipids by enzyme phospholipase A2.
third ventricle located
around area of diencephalon
sulcus directly anterior to the marginal sulcus
central sulcus (red-coloured part)
Use of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction to manage pain
firbomyalgia low back pain
How is stage A of anaesthesia facilitated
i.v of inhaled anaesthetic
myelencephalon becomes
medulla oblongata
define the neurobiology of resilience
"Resilience is a class of phenomena characterized by patterns of positive adaptation in the context of significant adversity or risk" (Masten & Reed)
**EXTRA KNOWLEDGE ON SLIDE 36 OF PP**
**
CHAPTER ON PAIN IN BOOK CALLED PHARMACOLOGY BY MOORE
**
examples of causitive organisms of meningitism, that are tested for using PCR
- Meningococcal and pneumococcal on EDTA &CSF - HSV/ Enteroviruses - TB
reasons for pain being more complex that initial presentation
- Multiple somatic complaints - Negative test results - Emotional burdens - Unsatisfied with care (patient and GP)- repeatedly present as looking for explanation of cause of pain - Thick set of notes - Feeling of helplessness - Poor therapeutic relationship - Lack of collaborative working
3rd step in treating migraines
- Avoid known patient-specific migraine triggers such as stress, or dietary factors. - ß-blockers (propranolol, metoprolol), calcium channel blockers (flunarizine), anticonvulsants (valproate, topiramate; caution in pregnancy), or pre-menstrual oestrogen can be effective. The tricyclic antidepressant amitryptyline is also of value
CSF is
- CSF is a colour-less liquid that baths the brain, assists in circulating substances, it provides cushioning and absorbs shock. - CSF is produced in the choroid plexus (a group of cells that line the ventricles) and production induces CSF circulation. - The choroid plexus also acts as a medium of exchange between the extra cellular fluid and the blood stream. - contains lots of ions
Herpes Simplex Encephalitis diagnostic appearance
- Characteristic MRI appearances - EEG- temporal lobe - CSF PCR 95% sens & 94% spec vs. brain biopsy - Mortality 60% untreated in biopsy-proven cases - IV Aciclovir(high dose 10mg/kg tds) for 2-3 weeks - Reduces deaths to 19%
sensory system action
- Converts a complicated natural stimulus (energy e.g. chemical, thermal) to action potentials - APs sent to spinal cord. - Intensity and duration of the firing signals (APs) indicates how painful the stimulus is
mechanism of action of NSAIDs
- Inhibition of cyclooxygenase enzyme - Reduced generation of Eicosanoids
examples of spirochaetes
- Leptospirosis - Lyme borreliosis - Syphilis
types of HRQoL pain scales
- Medical Outcomes Study Short-form Health Survey (SF-36) - Pain Disability Index - Roland-Morris Back Pain Disability Questionnaire - Western Ontario MacMaster Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC)
example of NO in relation to the blood gas partition coefficient
- Not great at dissolving in the blood phase - Majority of N2O remains in the gas phase - This favours the rapid entry of N2O into the brain to induce anaesthesia - Take home message - N2O promotes rapid induction and recovery from the anaesthesia
COX-2 is
- Not present all the time, inducible enzyme- generated under certain conditions - induced in activated inflammatory cells - converts AA to PGs - types of stimuli that drive the generation of the enzyme are IL-1 and TNF-alpha (cytokines)- responsible for production of prostaglandin mediators of inflammation during an insult - produces protective mechanism, in production of PGs- allows for recovery
journey of an i.v anaesthetic
- Once in the blood stream, some of the drug binds to plasma proteins and the rest remains unbound or 'free' - Drug is transported initially through venous blood and then the systemic circulation, eventually gaining access to cerebral circulation - A partial pressure gradient permits the entry of the anaesthetic to the brain where it then exerts its effect
Journey of an inhalation anaesthetic
- Once inhaled, the anaesthetic gains access into the alveoli - A partial pressure gradient (between alveoli blood and brain blood) is important in driving the anaesthetic from the respiratory pathway to the CNS - A steady state for maintenance of anaesthesia is required and this is dependent on partial pressures of alveoli, blood and brain
what is methadone
- Plasma half life > 24 hrs - Used to reduce opioid abuse- reduces physical abstinence syndrome - Psychological dependence - In presence of methadone, morphine/ diamorphine doesn't produce euphoria - Used as an analgesic clinically
halothane in terms of induction and recovery
- Readily dissolves in the blood phase and so less ideal - The system has to 'wait' until the entire blood phase gets saturated - Once the blood phase is saturated, halothane will occupy the gas phase, and then access the brain - Take home message - there is time spent waiting for halothane to saturate the blood phase before occupying the gas phase, hence, long time to induce and recover from anaesthesia
what is the phase that happens before the migraine called
prodrome attack
example of a task you may ask a patient to perform in an interpretation/ abstraction executive function test
- Similarities, 'estimates' "How are a piano and a drum alike?" 'How fast do race horses gallop frontal damage leads inability to make estimations
uses of bromocriptine
- Stopping breast milk production for medical reasons - Treating non-cancerous tumours in the brain called prolactinomas - Treating Parkinson's Disease (increases dopamine levels).
symptoms of dependence syndrome
- Strong desire or sense of compulsion to take the substance - Difficulties in controlling use (amount, onset, termination) - Physical withdrawal state (?) - Tolerance (?) - Progressive neglect of other interests, increasing time spent obtaining and taking substance - Persistence with substance despite detrimental effects: social, cognitive and physical
types of myelitis
- Transverse- acute transection of the cord - Ascending- ascending flaccid paralysis and sensory loss - Anterior horn cells e.g. polio- flaccid paralysis muscle pain no sensory or bladder dysfunction- polio, Enterovirus 71, some arboviruses and rabies virus**
how do we assess pain?
- Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales - Multi-dimensional pain assessment scales
examples of cancer pain
- Uterine cervical cancer, breast cancer - Bone metastases - Nerve compression
what is codeine
- Weak opiate (20% of morphine) - Less respiratory depression - Good anti-tussive
4 examples of processes genes influence
- the way we experience and process pain - how fast a drug is broken down in the body and how efficacious it is - how fast a drug gets into the bloodstream - the side effects of drugs
COX-1 is
- constitutive enzyme- present in all tissues, always present, actively generating eicosanoids - most tissues, blood platelets - important in tissue homeostasis
examples of NSAID GI disturbances
- dyspepsia - diarrhoea - nausea and vomiting - 1 in 5 chronic NSAID users have gastric damage - piroxicam and meloxicam highest risk
using uni-dimensional pain assessment scales
0= no pain 10= worst pain imaginable rate pain intensity by patient putting a cross on the scale, where they feel their pain lies
examples of volatile liquid anaesthetics
- halothane - enflurane - isoflurane - sevoflurane - desflurane
effects of opioids on ion channels, through the G-protein coupling
- open K+ channels - close Ca2+ channels
examples of when NSAIDs are used to reduce chronic/ acute inflammation
- rheumatoid arthritis - gout high doses needed
brainstem controls
respiratory and cardiovascular effects
examples of inducing agents
- thiopental - methohexitone/methohexital - propofol - etomidate
% of population with rare genetic disorders
1%
% of population with a polymorphic mutation
1-50%
posterior cerebral blood supply
2 vertebral aa from spinal cord and pass areas of vertebrae- large around base of pons, 2 vertebral aa merge to form 1 aa
half life of paracetamol
2-4 hrs
vol of CSF exchanged
150 ml
correlation ratio between disease and mutation
1:1
no. of thalamuses
2
ant circulation
2 carotid aa on either side of trachae feed forebrain
falx cerebri separates
2 cerebral hemispheres
falx cerebri sits between
2 hemispheres of the brain
what is diamorphine
2 molecules of morphine high lipophilicity- penetrates more rapidly than morphine broken down into morphine more potent than morphine activates reward pathway and more addictive than morphine
corresponding genotype to PM
2 non-funtional alleles
explain the 8 wk programme if MBSR
2.5h/week (+ homework) and one full day silent retreat Includes: meditation, gentle yoga and mind-body exercises Helps become more aware of habitual reactions and choose a new way to react In doing the work of this program participants realise they can break patterns of behaviour/reaction that might have held them back provides improvment in pain
mortality for listeriosis
20%
deaths from opioid pain killers
250 deaths from codeine in 2017
dura mater has how many folds
3
no. divisions of the trigeminal nn
3
no of times a day CSF is exchanges
3 thus, produce about 500ml of CSF a day
meninges are
3 layers of connective tissue that provide protection to brain
Mortality of pneumococcal meningitis
30%
features of CGRP
37 aa stored in vesicles and release
celecoxib benefits
375 fold selectivity for COX-2 over COX-1 both in vitro and ex vivo assays
the second phase lasts
4 to 72 hours
major withdrawal symptoms peak after
48-72 hrs after last dose
CTZ found
4th ventricle
% of healthy people with listeria in stool
5, due to many foods containing listeria
genetic factors that cause familial hemiplegic migraine
50% of cases with fami have a point mutation in the CACNA1A gene that encodes the pore-forming α1A subunit of the P/Q voltage-gated calcium channel (expressed on chromosome 19) Mutations result in a reduction of the flow of calcium across the membrane- functional consequence In 30% of patients with hemiplegic mirgraine, it results from mutations in ATP1A2 gene that encodes the Na+/K+ pump's α2 subunit.
what receptors are found on the nn terminals of the bipolar (opthlamic) trigeminal nn
5HT-1D heteroreceptors, which are G protein-coupled receptors
drugs used to control nausea/ vomiting
5HT3 antagonists (ondansetron, granisetron) Eicosanoid synthesis inhibition [corticosteroids] (dexamethasone) Neurokinin1 antagonist [agonist: substance P] (aprepitant, casopitant) Dopamine D2 antagonists (metoclopramide, domperidone, haloperidol) Muscarinic antagonists (scopolamine) Antihistamines (cinnarizine) Histamine H3 antagonist (betahistine: for vertigo nausea) Cannabinoid agonists (nabilone) Multiple [dopamine, 5HT & muscarinic antagonist] (olanzapine)
% of people with migraines who get a warning phase
60%
long-term complications of Meningitis
9-15% deafness (Hib ) Convulsions Visual/motor/sensory deficit
survival rate if infratentorial tumour is removed
90%
2nd step in treating migraines
triptans: 5-HT1B and 5-HT1D receptor agonists
stages of anaesthesia
A- induction of anaesthesia as patient is currently awake B- maintenance- anaesthetics at a steady state to permit surgery C- recovery
A and C-fibre action within the spinal cord
A-fibres relay touch, arrive deeper in the spinal cord than C-fibres C-fibres relay pain C-fibres release transmitters that activate neurones in the spinal cord neurones in the spinal cord signal down to projection neurones, where they converge with A-fibres a signal is then sent to the brain if projection neurone is deep down in the spinal cord, then the message runs along the spino-thalamic tract, to the brain
encephalomyelitis-causing organisms that enter via the mucosa
Herpes simplex virus, VZV
where are eicosanoids generated from
AA (arachidonic acid)
cingulate sulcus runs in a
AP direction
normal neuronal transmission, involving C-fibres
APs arrive at C-fibre terminal AP causes depolarisation and opening of calcium channels calcium enters the presynaptic terminal this causes the synaptic vesicles to fuse with the presynaptic membrane transmitters, glutamate and peptides, are released from C-fibres transmitters bind to post-synaptic receptors
different groups of primary afferent fibres
Aalpha sensory axon Abeta sensory axon Agamma sensory axon C sensory axon
physical signs of meningitis
Absence of fever Blood stream infection- ongoing sepsis and infection in CSF petechial/ purpuric rash can be found in samples of adrenals and kidneys meningeal irritation
examples of viral treatment of viral meningo-encephalitis
Aciclovir- HSV, VZV and Herpes B CMV- Ganciclovir (2nd line Foscarnet) HIV - may improve with antiretroviral treatment
physical exercise impact on depression
Active people are less likely to be depressed Exercise produces moderate clinical improvement from depression Exercise is as effective as cognitive behavioural therapy or antidepressants Exercise prevents depression relapse
an example of an everyday task using an executive function
All patients had damage to their frontal love and were showing problems with their behaviour. developed test to indentify difficulties in everyday activities. The three patients were asked by the experimenter to go to a shopping centre and purchase items, keep an appointment at a certain time and collect four pieces of information e.g. price of a pound of tomatoes or the exchange rate of the rupee. The patients were given a list of the errands (not a memory test) and instructions to follow, such as spend as little money as possible. Every single patient got into different difficulties: - One patient failed to purchase soap (on the list) as the store she visited didn't have her favourite brand. - All became embroiled in social complications. e.g one succeeded in obtaining the newspaper but failed to pay for it
treatment for listeriosis
Amoxicillin +/- Gentamicin (cephalosporins NO activity)
Management of Meningitis
Antibiotics- High dose agents that can cross blood-CSF Protect brain by ensuring adequate oxygenation Prevention of hypoglycaemia and hyponatraemia Anticonvulsants Decrease intracranial hypertension to reduce risk of herniation
action of paracetamol
Analgesic, antipyretic, weak anti-inflammatory
chronic effects of opiates
Anhedonia, constipation, depression, insomnia, dependence poor nutritional status danger of HIV and hepatitis from injecting significant tolerance
positive psychology move
Ann Masten - Ordinary magic Martin Seligman- Learned optimism Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi - Flow Carol Dweck - Fixed/Growth mindset Angela Duckworth - Grit Sonja Lyubomisky - up to 40% of our happiness is up to us Jon Kabat-Zinn- Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction
Mindfulness-based interventions & mental health
Anxiety Depression Substance abuse Eating disorders Chronic pain Improve well-benign and quality of life
describe the result of nn damage on the pain pathway
C and A-fibres damaged A-fibre damage causes allodynia, touch evoked pain C-fibre damage causes hyperalgesia no opioid receptors on A-fibres and so ineffective with A-fibre damage
bradykinin acts on
B1 and B2 receptors G-protein coupled receptors evoke action potential firing in sensory nn terminals B1 and B2 expressed by sensory nn
choroid plexus
BBB allows for exchange between ECF and blood stream
why infections in the CSF can be difficult to treat
BBB is a difficult barrier to get drugs across
actions of BK after injury
BK generated from damaged tissue and activates sensory nn terminal at its selective receptors sensory nn can release peptide substances into the local environment substances cause neurogenic inflammation release of peptides also increases vasodilation of blood vessels and thus, increase in permeability and a greater generation in BK BK can also act on sympathetic nn, in the periphery that can generate PGs pH of inflammatory exudate is lower due to high proton conc. protons can directly activate sensory nn as their nn terminals possess acid-sensing ion channels that respond to lower acidicty (greater proton no.) mast cells release 5HT which activates nn terminals release of cytokines and GFs lastly, action of PGs.
An unknown cause of bacterial meningitis in children younger than 2
Benzylpencillin and gentamicin
where do opioids effect neuronal transmission
C-fibre terminal or in brain
effect of migraine attacks on CGRP levels
CGRP levels in plasma, saliva (blood levels in cranium) are elevated
migraine-specific drugs being developed
CGRP receptor antagonists and MCA against CGRP and the CGRP receptor
2 forms of Cyclooxygenase Enzymes
COX-1 COX-2
difference between role of COX-1 and COX-2
COX-1 produces PGs in a homeostatic way COX-2 generates PGs locally, at site of injury
pathway of production of eicosanoids
COX= COX-1 and COX-2 COX enzymes converts AA to cyclic endoperoxides, which are then converted to PGs
production of CSF induces
CSF circulation
intracranial abscess picked up using
CT
imagaging modalities for pathologies of meninges
CT MRI
imaging modalities of vessel pathologies
CT MRI catheter angiography (+/- treatment)
imaging modalities for pathologies of lobes, gyri and basal ganglia
CT MRI fMRI
risks with triptans
CV disease chest pain due to coronary aa vasoconstriction
H. influenzae is treated using
Ceftriaxone chloramphenicol
S.pneumoniae
Ceftriaxone (Benzylpenicillin if sensitive) Add Vancomycin if there is a risk of the strain being antibiotic rresistant e.g. travel assoc.
group A meningococcus found in
Central Africa, subsaharan Africa
common post infection encephalitis
Chickenpox Flu A and B Measles
vaccines to prevent meningitis in young and elderly
Conjugated Hib and Meningococcal group C pneumococcal vaccines protection in <2 yr olds Men B vaccine Polyvalent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine (23 serotypes)
cortex role in pain
Consciousness of pain and the limbic system for emotional response
PGD2 receptor called
DP receptor
what is mindfulness meditation
Development of awareness of present-moment experience with a compassionate, non judgmental stance
short-term complications of Meningitis
Death Subdural collection/ empyema Cerebral vein thrombosis Hydrocephalus
examples of specific treatment of viral meningo-encephalitis
E.g amoxicillin for listeria Doxycycline for Q fever, Chlamydia
sigmoid sinus drains into
EJV towards heart
PGE2 receptor called
EP receptor
Mindfulness-Based stress reduction (MBSR)
Eight week course developed in the 70's by Kabat-Zinn Based on the Buddhist teachings on mindfulness but removed of all religious context- secularised mindfulness Aims to address long-term stress, which can lead to poor mental and physical health treat patients with chronic pain using mindfulness meditation
incidence of migraines
Episodic 10- 15% of people Female: Male= 3.5 : 1 Affects 16% of menstruating females 2-3 times more common if a first degree relative has it
acute effects of opiates
Euphoria, tranquility, miosis, drowsiness, itching, nausea
what is an executive function
Executive function is a description of psychological processes that underlie flexible goal directed behaviour
PGF2alpha receptor called
FP receptor
example of acute non-cancer pain
Fracture, appendicitis, MI
Go means
G other
Rapid diagnostic tests for meningitis
Gram stain for bacteria- 50% sensitivity Zn lab tests- TB few organisms present PCR Antigen agglutination tests- Cryptococcus
common primary infection encephalitis
HSV1 Enteroviruses Listeria Measles Mumps
Herpes Simplex Encephalitis causes
Haemorrhagic necrosis especially temporal lobes people present with personality changes CSF abnormal in 97% , RBCs in an atraumatic LP , mild lymphocytosis
symptoms of meningitis
Headache global Neck and back stiffness Nausea and vomiting due to raise in intracranial pressure Photophobia (don't like bright lights, non-specific)
why does moving mm affect brain function
Healthy individuals doing regular physical exercise have less anxiety symptoms Exercise improves anxiety symptoms in people with anxiety or stress-related disorders Thus, exercise is as effective reducing the symptoms of anxiety as medication
etomidate as an i.v anaesthetic
Hypnotic agent that induces anaesthesia but lacks analgesia Benefit - little to no effects on cardiovascular system Usually used for sufferers of cardiovascular dysfunction
stages of the depth of anaesthesia
I- analgesic stage II- excitement stage III- surgical anaesthesia stage IV- medullary paralysis stage
In CT and MRI, how is dye given
I.V
triptans contraindicated in
IHD
PGI2 receptor called
IP receptor
listeriosis- predisposing factors
Immuncompromised, neonates and >50 years with rising incidence with age
Pneumococcal Meningitis predisposing factors
Immunosuppression esp. if no spleen or spleen poorly functioning Alcohol Diabetes Hyposplenism Myeloma
method of action for cocaine
Increases catecholamine neurotransmitter function by preventing re-uptake
examples of neuritis
Infectious e.g. leprosy, trypanosomes, CMV, lyme neuroborreliosis (cranial), HSV+VZV (Sensory ganglia) Post infectious causes e.g. Gullian Barre syndrome- post Campylobacter jejuni , Mycoplasma pneumoniae, herpesviruses- antibodies raised by infection act on nn and can lead to difficulty self-ventilating Toxins
what is neuritis
Inflammation of a peripheral nerve
Cocaine preferred methods of administration
Inhaling cocaine better than chewing coca leaves
how does encephalomyelitis enter the CNS
Initial entry and primary site of replication: Respiratory, GIT, s.c., mucosa Then from blood into CNS Rarely via peripheral nerves
describe the aura phase
Initial visual disturbance, 30 minutes Visual area lost/ blurred surrounding area 'shimmers'
infront of lateral apertures
Interpeduncular cistern
examples of cerebral dysfunctions that can result from encephalitis
Irritability, altered personality, drowsiness Ataxia Excessively brisk tendon reflexes Signs of cerebral/ brainstem failure e.g. sluggish pupil reflexes Signs of brain swelling e.g. focal neurological signs
met-analysis on the anxiolytic effect of exercise for people with anxiety and stress-related disorders
L shows exercise is helping and R shows exercise doesn't help each square shows the mean for a study- each study shows a positive effect red diamond shows for all the studies, physical exercise has a positive effect on symptoms of anxiety and stress- significant as corner of diamond isn't touching 0; not a strong effect. study shows papers from panic disorder, generalised anxiety and PTSD; physical exercise has a positive effect
example of a task you may ask a patient to perform in a sequenced movement executive function test
LLRLLR..., 'fist, cut, slap'
what drugs enhance serotonin (5HT) function
LSD Ectasy
drugs that don't have a strong compulsion to take
LSD mescaline
main site of nociception afferent termination
Laminae I and II (most dorsal laminae)
developing growth mindsets
Learning to become more "growth mindset oriented" helps improve academic achievement
IMMPACT measurement of patient rating of improvement and satisfaction
Likert scale- similar to verbal pain scale
IMMPACT measurement of pain intensity
• NRS (0 - 10) • Rescue analgesia used
aspirin used in
MI therapy
why was the vascular theory disproved
MRI allowed us to look at blood flow changes and notice that they did not occur in patients with common migraines in patients where blood flow changes did occur, there did appear to be biphasic changes (e.g. vasoconstriction followed by vasodilation) but patterns of change didn't follow symptoms; headache started too early (first stage of migraine)
overview of key features if executive function
May be subtle deficits Normal speech, perception, IQ may be normal Loss of goal oriented behaviour and motivation Stimulus driven behaviour (utilisation behaviour) Deficit in initiation of behaviour (apathy) Impaired monitoring of responses and so problems correcting themselves when they make a mistake Disinhibition (socially inappropriate)
encephalomyelitis-causing organisms that enter via the respiratory system
Measles , mumps, VZV, Cryptococcus neoformans
Infection in listeriosis
Meningo-encephalitis brainstem with ataxia and movement disorders
triggering factors in migraine
Mental stress- 75% of cases Refractory errors in glasses Chocolate, eggs or fruit- 15% Alcohol Oral contraceptives Time zone shifts Physical exertion- 45%
uses of Lumbar puncture in meningitis
Most rapid diagnostic test Helps to distinguish between bacterial and viral causes in most cases
examples of experimental tasks to precisely assess specific executive processes- assessing working memory
N-back snaps Digit span delayed response task
examples of bacterial meningitis
N. meningitidis H. influenzae type b S.pneumoniae Unknown
where do the neurones in the meso-limbic dopamine pathway, terminate
NAC
site of drug action
NK1 antagonists treat most forms of migraine attack 5HT3 effective against migriane caused by chemo, surgery/ radiotherapy balemic patients benefit from benzodiazepine to stop the cortical centres initially reflex many drugs combined with NK1 antagonist
types of bacterial meningitis and age groups they are commonly found in
NM common in children/ young adults streptococcus penumoniae common in children younger than 2 and the elderly Listeria monocytogenes seen in neonates and the immunocompromised group B streptococci, Escherichia coli and listeria monocytogenes are found in the neonates
example of gasesous anaesthetics
NO
anaesthetics and their MAC no.
NO has least potency and halothane has the greatest potency
antagonist treatment
Naltrexone: - Therapy for opiate addiction. - Patients must be de-toxified and opiate-free for several days before naltrexone can be taken to prevent precipitating opiate abstinence syndrome. Mecamylamine: - nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist. - Blocks rewarding actions of nicotine and cue-induced craving.
what is not resilience
Never experiencing a problem/pain/unhappiness Pretending as if it didn't happem something unconscious ability that cannot be changed
how does neuroplasticity work
New neurones, dendritic/axonic processes and/or changes in synaptic strength
diagnosing migraines
No definitive test or diagnosis Careful assessment of patient history Elimination of alternative causes of headache e.g. trauma, other drug treatments or rare disorders. Diagnostic criteria: must have at least 5 of the particular attacks that fullfill criteria in B-E (see sheet) phonophobia is loud noises in children, headache may be bilateral and can be associated with diarrhoea and GI disturbances
partial pressure at equilibrium when using anaesthics
PA (alveolar) ↔ Pa (arterial) ↔ Pbr (brain)
Meninges layers
PAD (inside out)
descending pathways descend to
PAG and medulla of the spinal cord
Diagnosis of viral meningo-encephalitis
PCR - replaced biopsy and viral culture but not 100% sensitivity as may not have sufficient virus in that site CSF (HSV , enteroviruses and VZV) Stool, throat swab, urine (measles, mumps) - systemic infections excreted in these sites MRI more sensitive than CT EEG
list of PGs
PGI2 PGE2 PGD2 TXA2
bradykinin increases production of
PGs reinforces positive feedback loop
eicosanoids made up of
PGs thromboxanes leukotrienes
does PG or bradykinin have a more important role in inflammation
PGs- pivotal part of inflammatory pathway
how does CYP2D6 SNPs influence patient outcomes
PM phenotype have an undetectable morphone plasma conc.- getting little analgesic from opioids UM phenotype- extensive metabolism to morphine, increased risk of adverse side effects
state the characteristics of a migraine
Painful, pulsing headache typically lasting 4 hours to 3 days, often unilateral and associated with photophobia.
ketamine as an i.v anaesthetic
Patient is unconscious but appears awake; induces amnesia - dissociative anaesthesia increases blood pressure and cardiac output Potent bronchodilator Not favoured in young adults due to induction of hallucinations
drugs that block N-Methyl-D-Aspartate (NMDA antagonists)
Phencylidine (PCP) ketamine
describe the second phase of a migraine
Photophobia- made worse by exposure to bright lights/ loud noise Nausea and Vomiting Prostrate Unable to participate in normal activities
encephalomyelitis-causing organisms that enter via the GIT
Poliovirus, other enteroviruses, Listeria monocytogenes
practical anaesthesia
Premedication atropine- decreases secretions benzodiazepine- sedation Fast induction- thiopental (intravenous) Maintain- isoflurane (inhalation) Muscle relaxation- neuromuscular blocking drug (antracurium, pancuronium, suxamethonium) Reduce pain- analgesic (opiate); also used post-operative
goals of medication in treating migraines
Primary to provide acute relief to recurrent attacks Secondary to introduce effective prophylactic treatment
how do we know about addiction?
Put catheter into different parts of brain and infuse drugs into the brain solutions go in and go through a dialysis membrane and then fluid comes back out of tube Some neurotransmitters will go across the dialysis membrane and thus, will indicate what substances have crossed
Chemoprophylaxis for meningitis
Reduce secondary cases in close contacts and households of meningococcal and Hib disease- single dose treatment to clear nasopharyngeal carriage before it enters CSF Rifampicin or ciprofloxacin clear nasopharyngeal carriage (ceftriaxone)
Encephalomyelitis variations worldwide
Seasonal variation Geographic variation Animal exposure Immunocompromised
propofol as an i.v anaesthetic
Short acting with onset of action of 30 seconds and rapid recovery decreases blood pressure and intracranial pressure Does NOT provide analgesia Accompanied by excitatory phenomena - muscle twitching, yawning, hiccups Some anti-emetic effects post recovery
thiopental as an i.v anesthetic
Similar to propofol - fast acting within 1 minute May cause apnoea, coughing, chest wall spasm, laryngospasm, bronchospasm Not commonly used now as better tolerated agents available
where does the somatosensory system receive information from
Skin, Muscle, Tendons, Ligaments and Connective Tissue
small molecules allowed through the BBB
Small molecules (oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose, or select amino acids) are allowed to pass into the brain pathogens and larger molecules (antibodies) can not pass.
growth vs fixed mindset
Success in studies and work depend not only on cognitive ability, but also on benefits about learning and intelligence. 2 main types of people: people with growth mindset and a fixed mindset Growth mindset- intelligence develops through: - effort - (change of) strategies 0 guidance/mentoring from others Fixed mindset- intelligence is a stable characteristic
treatment of viral meningo-encephalitis
Supportive Specific treatment Viral
Causes of a Lymphocytic CSF
TB Partially treated bacterial infection Intracranial abscess can lead to inflammatory response in CSF Spirochaetes (bacteria): Viral meningo-encephalitis Lymphocytic leukaemias
TXA2 receptor caleld
TP receptor
vomiting centre has inputs from
The area postrema; detects blood chemicals (has no BBB). The vestibular system via the vestibulocochlear (8th cranial) nerve; plays a major role in motion sickness and is rich in muscarinic cholinergic and histamine H1 receptors. Vagal (10th cranial) nerve afferents activated when the pharynx is irritated, leading to the gag reflex. The nucleus tractus solitarius has high density of 5-HT3 and NK1 receptors. Vagal and other gastrointestinal afferents respond to irritation of the GI mucosa by chemotherapy, radiation, distention, or acute gastroenteritis via gut 5-HT3 receptors. Intracranial pressure receptors mediating nausea after head injury or meningitis. Descending inputs from higher centres arising from the sight or smell of vomit, situations associated with vomiting, psychiatric disorders, or with general stress.
another example of temporal aspect of planning
The patient was troubled by her inability to prepare her family's evening meal. The patient could remember the ingredients for the dishes but she could not organise her actions into a proper sequence. She might assemble all of the ingredients but become flustered and switch her preparation from one dish to other, or mix up which items belonged together. incoherent behaviour
why is genotype-related opioid prescribing important
There has been a marked rise in prescribing of opioid drugs in the UK and the trend to increased prescribing continues. Data for 2013 show that 21.7 million prescriptions were issued (not including opioid substitution treatment for addiction) with a total cost of £289.8 million. The increase in prescribing has been predominantly for the treatment of non-cancer pain: i.e. chronic pain The increase in prescribing has been associated with increased costs to the NHS.
causes of arbovirus infections
Togaviridae, Flaviviridae and Bunyaviridae
stimuli detected by somatosensory system
Touch Brush Pressure Tickle Temperature (hot, cold, warm) Pain
meningitis symptoms that can occur in what other infections?
UTI, dysentery SAH, malignancy, NSAIDs
which molecules cross through the BBB the quickest
Unbound molecules lipid soluble molecules unionised molecules
examples of supportive treatment of viral meningo-encephalitis
Ventilatory support Blood glucose and electrolytes monitored and corrected (hypothalamic involvement) Anti-epileptics Control cerebral oedema Cooling if extreme hyperthemia
VPL is
Ventral posterolateral nucleus
Neuro psychological tests of Executive Function
Wisconsin Card Sorting Task Tower of Hanoi/ London Stroop Rey Figure Test Temporal Memory BADS (The Behavioural Assessment of the Dysexecutive Syndrome) All come with 'Norms'
example of tasks you may ask the patient to complete in a verbal fluency executive function test
Words beginning with F, A, S in 60 seconds- someone with dementia may only provide about 17 Members of categories (towns, animals)
2 considerations in relation to the blood-gas partition coefficient
a gas phase and a blood phase thus, how much of the inhalation anaesthetic will dissolve in the gas phase and how much will dissolve in the blood phase.
the OPRM1 A118G SNP leads to
a loss of mu-opioid receptor function
brain development similar to
a mm increase in no. of synapses related to environmental enrichment
what did researchers find in people who felt no pain
a mutated SCN9A gene this resulted in a defective protein channel called NaV1.7 this resulted in no pain
opioid extract contains
a no. of alkaloids inc morphine
what is congenital insensitivity to pain
a rare inherited condition where the person cannot feel physical pain and has no sense of smell
what happens in rare genetic disoders
a single mutation can have a big effect mutation can cause disease
NaV1.7 is?
a sodium voltage-gated channel expressed only in sensory and nociceptive neurones
neuropeptides of opthalmic division of trigeminal nn
a variety of neuropeptides one is the calcitonin gene related neuropeptide (CGRP) another in substance P
what are both Group B streptococci and Escherichia coli a part of
a woman's normal vaginal flora
if present with meningitis, % presenting with pneumonia
around 50%
define pleocytosis
abnormally large number of lymphocytes in the CSF.
superior/ dorsal
above
drug processing in the body
absorbed distributed metabolised eliminated - all these processes occur using molecules
WHO committees recommend what terms, in relation to substance addiction
abuse and dependence
divisions of selecting task relevant information
accentuate attended information excluding irrelevant information
IMMPACT measurement of patient disposition
according to CONSORT recommendations- how patients flow through trial e.g. no. of patients who completed the trial
ranking of harm rating
according to classification systems that purport to relate to the harms and risks of each drug However, the methodology and processes underlying classification systems are generally neither specified nor transparent, which reduces confidence in their accuracy and undermines health education messages. A group developed and explored the feasibility of the use of a nine-category matrix of harm, with an expert delphic procedure, to assess the harms of a range of illicit drugs in an evidence-based fashion Ectasy is not, numerically, a problem
what is hydrocephalus
accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
describe the result of high intensity pain on the pain pathway
activates C-fibres this has a protective role opioid receptors are on C-fibres and can inhibit them
what happens when morphine binds to the presynaptic µ-opioid receptor
activates Gi singalling pathway inhibits adenylyl cyclase reduces cAMP inhibitory affect on protein kinases and signalling in cell- suppressant effect on cell closes calcium and opens potassium channels hyperpolarises presynaptic terminal and so it is harder for transmitter to be released reduces transmitter release and so less excitability and less transmission of signal
describe the result of tissue damage on pain pathway? treatment?
activation of C-fibres all the time hyperalgesia opioids used as an analgesic
third migraine theory
activation of sensory nn in trigeminal ( CN III) nn nn can release neurotransmitters can cause vasoliation V1's activity is enhanced during attacks
what does NICE recommend in treatment-resistant cases
acupuncture or gabepentin
categories for duration of pain
acute chronic
NSAIDs are a type of acute or chronic analgesic? why?
acute as side effects are damaging in long-term use
causes of encephalitis
acute immune-mediated encephalitis unknown arbovirus and rabis are common causes in some part of the world
Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales useful for
acute pain
why isn't the duration of symptoms (acute vs chronic) a good discriminator of pain
acute pains can go on for a long time pain may be more complex than initial presentation
classification of pain
acute vs chronic cancer vs non-cancer pain mechanisms
when do extradural haemorrhages occur
after a skull fracture (80% of the time) in young patients rapidly expands due to bleeding bone and aa running along the outside of ten dura, that have severed
when do withdrawal symptoms subside
after a week
when are Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales used
after surgery
drug classes of opiates
agonists of G protein-coupled opioid receptors (µ receptors mainly)
examples of local anaesthetics
all end in -caine lignocaine bupivacaine ropivacaine cocaine
what do 5HT-1B receptors do
also G protein-coupled receptors on blood vessels this contributed to vasoconstriction
mechanisms of action of local anaesthetics
alter voltage gated sodium channels uncharged form of anaesthetics gains access into intracellular fluid becomes charged once inside the intracellular fluid charged anaesthetic associated with and closes the sodium gated channel and so sodium ions can't enter the cell thus, removing the excitatory mechanism that processes pain
effects of drugs on dopamine levels
amphetamine shows an increase in level of dopamine, no influence on metabolism of dopamine cocaine has a slower onset of an increased level of dopamine nicotine shows an increased metabolism level of dopamine due to increased metabolite level nicotine also shows a greater increase in dopamine level in the accumbens than in the caudate ethanol shows dose dependent- dopamine level; increasing ethanol increases dopamine level
descending pathways start in
amygdala and hypothalamus
what is lymphocytic CSF
an abnormal increase in the amount of lymphocytes in the CSF
familial hemiplegic migraines are accompanied with
an aura
BBB is
an interface that ensures the circulatory system (blood) is kept separate from the extracellular fluid/CSF. Pericytes and astrocytes also play a role in maintaining the BBB
properties of high conc. of cocaine
anaesthetic properties
COX-2 inhibitors actions
analgesic/ anti-inflammatory effects in arthritis, low back pain
endogenous substance that works of cannabinoid receptors
anandamide anandamide increases release of dopamine
aa teritories
anterior covers less of brain middlde has largest teritory lenticulostriate aa feeds basal ganglia lenticulostriate aa come of middle circulatory aa sup cerebellar covers the vast majority of the cerebellum
describe the man-on-fire syndrome
any activity e.g. putting on a sweater feels like hot lava is being pour onto their bodies
maximise exercise-induced brain gain
any exercise better than no exercise aim for aerobic exercise e.g. running, swimming, cycling should be part of daily routine e.g. walking should be 30-45 mins, 3-5 times a week exercise at the beginning of the day- more focused
best NK1 antagonist
aprepitant substance P is major output neurotransmitter from vomiting centre
Which meningeal layer has blood vessels and cerebral spinal fluid?
arachnoid matter
Lymphocytic CSF called
aseptic meningtis
uncover task-orientated perfusion
ask them to perform a task whilst undergoing scan e.g. MRI
an example of an experimental task to precisely assess specific executive processes- assessing temporal/ recency memory
ask which item on the card the patient hasn't seen in the pack/ has seen most recently in the pack
examples of short-term analgesic NSAIDs
aspirin- COX-2 inhibitors paracetamol ibuprofen
functional neuroimaging
assesses for functions e.g. metabolism, task-orientated perfusion etc
structural neuroimaging
assesses for normal anatomy and thus, seeks to ind anything which may be distoring it e.g. tumour, haemorrage
corresponding genotype to EM
at least 1 functional allele
corresponding genotype to IM
at least 1 reduced fucntional allele
name the first phase of a migraine
aura
classical migraine described as having an
aura, even if no prodrome and then stage 2
where are primary afferent fibres found
axon bundles
what structure important in choice making
basal ganglia
telencephalon bcomes
basal ganglia cortex
what surrounds the endothelial cells
basement membrane
BBB image
basement membrane in yellow colour
most commonly used assessment tool in speciality pain assessment
brief pain inventory
inferior/ ventral
below
accessing CSF
between L3- L5 spinal cord now fibres- cauda equina
fourth ventricle located
between pons and cerebellum
where is the subarachnoid space
between the arachnoid membrane and the pia mater
hyperalgesia
bigger pain response for a given painful stimulus
colour of CSF on a CT
black
aneurysm, spotted in image B, caused? treated with?
bleeding to subarachnoid spaces treated with endovascular coiling
bradykinin comes from
blood and tissue
complications of haemorrhage in brain
blood compresses brain due to limits of skull
how does venous blood from the vv reach the IJV
blood drains from vv into the dural venous sinuses and then into the IJV
venous drainage
blood flow can be bidirectional veins can flow into each other major vein, middle of brain- superior sagital sinus
inferior anterior cerebellar
blood supply of ant aspect of cerebellum comes after merge of 2 vertebral aa
inferior posterior cerebellar
blood supply to posterior aspect of cerebellum
Subarrachnoid space contains
blood vessels and CSF fluid
pathogenesis of bacterial meningitis
blood-borne spread- common as organisms usually travel from nasopharynx to the blood stream across the choroid plexus pneumococcus present in the nasopharynx esp. in very young/old- risk of passing into CSF and causes meningitis cerebral capillary epithelium becomes leaky and so plasma proteins enter and pressure rises photophobia
2 things to consider within anaesthetics
blood-gas partition coefficient oil-gas partition coefficient
i.v anaesthetic drug given as
bolus dose
periosteal layer of dura mater adheres to
bone
what is NICE recommended for adults with frequent chronic migraines
botulinum toxin type A
different regions of spinal cord project to different regions in
brain
diencephalon sits on top of
brainstem
midbrain part of
brainstem
describe the vascular theory
build up of metabolites e.g. changes in PCO2, PGs, H+- humoural disturbance in blood vessels causes an abnormal cerebral BF. first, vasoconstriction inside meninges (intra-cerebral vasoconstriction)- causing aura second, vasodilation of extra-cerebral blood vessels- causing headache vessels released associated pain.
name of bumps and fissures in brain
bumps- gyri fissures- sulci
reasons for acute pains going on for a long period of time
burns dressings changes sickle cell disease and so have regular crisis- infrequent occurrence but throughout the whole of their life flare ups of RA
how can the secondary theory (changes in neurones) be mimicked in animals
by application of potassium to the animals
nocicpetion activates
c-fibres pain pathways
issues with antagonist effects
can be overcome by increasing dose of drug
use of the discovery of the defective NaV1.7 channel
can be used to develop drugs that target the NaV1.7 use these drugs as an alternative in adults who suffer from chronic pain and cannot be treated using current analgesics e.g. NSAIDs or to avoid the side effects of drugs such as opioids
other actions of naloxone
can reverse action of opioids given in cases of opioid overdoses
tectum- Posterior view of brain and dorsal view of midbrain
can see the superior and inferior collliculi
purpose of communicating aa
can take over if issues with main aa e.g. in hyperplasia of the R anterior cerebral aa, the aa can be supplied by the L ACA, via the communicating aa
why is microscopy for TB not done
can't always be seen few organisms per mil and so a negative result doesn't mean no infection
categories for cause of pain
cancer non-cancer
difference between cancer and non-cancer pain
cancer pain: - progressive - may be mixture of acute and chronic - due to surgery - compression of nerves - location of tumour non-cancer pain: - many different causes - acute or chronic
why can't Group B streptococci and Escherichia coli be gotten rid of from the mother
cannot be killed by antibiotics
cerebellum located
caudally
action of triptans
cause constriction of cranial blood vessels and subsequent inhibition of neuropeptide (CGRP) release.
issues with cause of chronic non-cancer pain
cause may not be obvious
An unknown cause of bacterial meningitis in children older than 2/ adults is treated using
ceftriazone amoxicillin added if patient immunocompromised or older than 50
N. meningitidis is treated using
ceftriazone or benzylpenicilin if sensitive
choroid plexus is
cells that line ventricles
response to Lymphocytic CSF
cellular response in CSF
cisterna magna sits directly below the
cerebellum
signs of encephalitis
cerebral irritation/ dysfunction
considerations when changing route of opioids
change in metabolism effects of a single injected dose are 6x that of a single oral dose
brainstem role in pain response
changes in BP, increases respiration increases orientation towards stimulus
long-term neuroplasticity due to
changes in gene expression relies on epigenetic changes- changes in moelcules around DNA
I.V contrast of subarachnoid haemorrahge is done to?
check for no bleeding aneurysm can see out-pouching of vessels
5HT3 best against
chemo vomiting 70-90% of patients protected against
important area in vomiting centre called
chemoreceptor trigger zone (CTZ)
in the past, what age group had haemophilus influenzae type b been common in
children under 5
CSF produced in
choroid plexus
use of longer-acting analgesic NSAIDs? used in conjunction with?
chronic conditions in conjuction with opioids for post-operative pain chronic pain e.g. cancer pain as it has both an inflammatory and nn driven basis
examples of chronic non-cancer pain
chronic low back/ spinal pain arthritis
opioid use in chronic pain
chronic pain states have reduced effectiveness of opioids, in terms of analgesia
CSF drains into
cisterna magna biggest cistern
about IMMPACT
clarified different domains that should be included within trials in relation to drugs domains: - Pain intensity - Physical functioning - Emotional functioning - Patient rating of improvement and satisfaction with treatment - Other symptoms and adverse effects of drugs during treatment - Patient disposition and characteristics e.g. if patients withdrew due to side effects, lack of effectiveness etc; allows to see how wide-scale effective a particular treatment is
% of suffers with classical and common migraines
classical- 15% common- 85%
tretment of nausea
combination of anti-emetics and mild sedation (benzodiazepine) can be used to reduce severe nausea. Corticosteroids are not very effective for control of acute vomiting 5HT3 antagonists are not very effective against non-chemotherapy vomiting.
effectiveness of combination therapies and some examples of their uses
combination therapies show additive benefits in highty emetic chemotherapy-induced emesis, a combination of a NK1 antagonist, a 5HT antagonist and a corticosteroid give 85-80% protection against vomiting
posterior aa
comes off the top of the basilar aa runs towards the temporal lobe supplies the inferior surface of temporal love, hippocampus and medial aspect of occipital lobe
brain reward pathways
compulsion to take/do the addicted substance learn to use the addicted substance as it is pleasurable, rewarding e.g rats will self-administer some drugs and these drugs activate reward pathways
why are steroids not used to treat pneumococcal infections
concerns that resistant strain antibiotic may be penetrated**
superior sagittal sinus moves post to form
confluence of sinuses
cerebral aqueduct
connects the third and fourth ventricles
brainstem
conscious and unconscious function most functions
fluoroscopy
constant stream of X-rays gives dynamic/ functional information
opioid side effects
constipation nausea anti-tussive effects drowsiness dizziness low BP physical addiction bronchospasms hives respiratory depression
what are the 2 modes of how action selection is normally achieved
contention scheduling- perceive environment and select which best suits you; stimulus drive supervisory attention system- cognitive demanding decision making, requires weighing up 2 choices where one option is the norm
what is important when using Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales
continuity and similarity of use ensures pain is comparative between 2 different healthcare professionals
medulla oblongata becomes
continuous with the spinal cord
pia mater follows
contours of brain
what happens if you injure yourself
convergence of signals from different fibres- a single sensory neurone in the CNS can receive input from many sensory receptors amplifies signal entering spinal cord amplifies pain reception- indicates damage
how does vomiting work
coordinated involuntary reflex involving powerful sustained contraction of the abdominal, chest wall and diaphragm muscles (which greatly increase intra-gastric pressure) opening of the cardioesophageal sphincter, glottis and jaws. rapid evacuation of stomach contents up to and out of mouth- stop breathing and epiglottis closes over trachea so we don't inhale any vomit
nuclei communicate with
cortex
thalamus gateway to
cortex
mutations in TRESK K2P potassium channels may cause
cortical spreading depression and lead to familial migraines
neonate radiology
cranial ultrasound
withdrawal effects of opiates
cravings insomnia restlessness diarrhoea mm and bone pain vomiting cold flushes with goose bumps kicking movements
importance of sulci
define boundaries of lobes within brain
bradykinin generated
de novo- during inflammation locally, at site of inflammation
use of 5HT-1D agonists in treating migraines
decrease CGRP release, basis of triptans
how are NSAIDs analgesic
decrease sensitisaton and activation of nn terminals
resolution to second phase
deep sleep loss of headache
what is a lamina
describe different layers down spinal cord lamina I and II in the uppermost part of grey matter, dorsal horn of spinal matter deeper lamina and deeper into spine (more frontal)
3 most important layers of meninges
dura mater- tough arachnoid mater pia mater- soft matter, very thin
examples of morphine-like analgesics
diamorphine codeine methadone
examples of benzodiazepines
diazepam; lorazepam; midazolam
below ventricles
diencephalon
forebrain forms
diencephalon telencephalon
issue with Cyt P450
differ between ethnicities
difference between C and A fibres input in the spinal cord
different level of entry to spinal cord
difference between sensory and mm axons
different names same essential role
difference between meningococcal disease around the world
different serum groups can be due to genetics
issue with serum group B meningococcal
difficulty producing vaccine against
example of a direct effect toxin that causes neuritis
diptheria
different effects of toxin-causing neuritis
direct effect indirect effect
median aperture located
directly inferior to the 4th ventricle
neuropathic and Leeds Assessment of Neuropathic Symptoms and Signs (LANSS) scale pain scales used to
distinguish between neuropathic pain from other types of pain
central sulcus marks
division between the frontal and parietal lobe
absence of bacteria in gram stain
doesn't mean no infection
characteristics of a subdural haemorrhage
doesn't tough gyri most common in elderly, who have slightly shrunken brains bridging veins crossing the meninges can be severed by minor trauma and lead to a venous bleed can be acute or chronic
receptors in CTZ
dopamine D2, 5-HT3, opioid and acetylcholine), a neurokinin (substance P) is the major output transmitter.
bromocriptine drug class
dopamine agonist
many drugs of abuse increase what substance release
dopamine in the NAC
alchol admin for a better 'rush'
drink more and in a shorter space of time
dopamine pathay
drug dependence and reward pathways
greater rush/ euphoria if
drug is injected high is greater- faster and higher peaks in brain dopamine level
why can't extradural haemorrhage cross the midline? what is the result?
due to the suture haemorrhage continues to expand and put pressure on the brain beneath it
Which meningeal layer protects the brain
dura mater
meningeal layer has lifted parts called
dural reflections
spaces within dural layers are called
dural venous sinuses
Meningococcal disease in England and Wales
during WWI and WWII found in uni students
when is Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales carried out
during movement- not necessarily walking at rest e.g. asking someone to cough
use of migraine diaries
ease of diagnosis help to avoid further attacks by identifying triggers nausea? aura? location? throbbing? female- relation to menstrual cycle? eating anything in diet that is associated with migraine attacks?
why is cerebellum useful in terms of orientation of the brain
easily identifiable orientate self
importance of lateral sulcus
easy to identify
forms of addiction
eating sex exercise shopping football falling in love- parallels with substance misuse, pleasure
what other group does not present typically with meningitis
elderly and immunocompromised
exercising too much
elevates cortisol levels and so feel stressed can be symptomatic of mental health diseases e.g. eating disorders
what does nausea proceed
emesis
amygdala and hypothalamus roles
emotional processing stress
myelitis can happen with or without
encephalitis
case definition of encephalitis
encephalopathy
example of an endogenous opioid
endorphines e.g. NA
blood vessels of BBB are composed of
endothelial cells, which fit together tightly. When two cells touch, their membranes join together to create a barrier that allows passage only of selected material between the blood and brain. These joined edges are called tight junctions.
characteristics of a subarachnoid haemorrhage
enters gyri
stress-induced analgesia pathway allows for
escaping dangerous situations to somewhere safe e.g. on a battle field, a fox, danger etc activates descending inhibitory control pathway- shuts down excitation in spinal cord, shuts down pain signals in the short-term survival mechanism
what does genetic variation of the mu-opioid receptor depend on
ethnicity can be found in 2-48% of populations
effects of opioids
euphoria analgesia sleep
effects of cocaine
euphoria and excitement, increased capacity for work
what happens if PGs injected into someone
evokes a painful response PGs able to activate pain pathways
physical exercise and memory
exercise improves memory People more fit have better memory and larger hippocampus Exercise increases BF to the hippocampus and improves memory- shown in fMRI R shows exercise improves memory diamond shows exercise improves memory but not significantly
importance in difference between nociception and pain
experiments determine nociception but not pain
venticles
extend far anteriorly and posteriorly cirulates substances around brain as CSF flows through ventricles contains CSF
what type of haemorrhage has a lens-shaped haemorrhage
extra-dural haemorrhage
Assessment of Pain in Children
faces scale associate with which pain they are feeling
true or false: Health care personnel know best the nature of the patient's pain
false
true or false: Psychogenic pain is not real
false
true or false: The amount of damage determines pain intensity
false
folds of dura mater
falx cerebri Tentorium cerebelli Falx cerebelli
AA metabolised by
fatty acid cyclo-oxygenase enzyme
superior cerebellum aa
feeds most of cerebellum
pain describes
feeling/upset/sadness felt includes psycholgical component
Fentanyl vs. Morphine potency
fentanyl is more potent, per mg, than morphine AND heroin
Define antipyretic
fever reducing
VPL role
final relay before signals reach the cortex integration noxious and tactile stimuli
meningitis in infants
flaccid- later opisthotonus bulging fontanelle due to increased ICP fever and vomiting often the only sign strange cry convulsions
what is the inflammatory soup
fluid that alters function of the substance surrounding the nn
pia mater
follows contours of brain small delicate protective (green line)
thus, what is favoured in an inhalation anaesthetic
for a lot of the anaesthetic to be in the gas phase so that it can reach the brain and induce anaesthesia
physical exercise impact on depression- systematic review on cochrane library
found 35 studies that were conducted with patients with depression they measured the patients depression level R of graph shows exercise makes depression worse but : shows exercise was beneficial in depression most studies lie on the L overall (diamond), positive impact of exercise on depression again, diamond not touching line and so shows significant benefit of exercise on depression
CSF fluid runs
from lateral ventricles into intervetnricular froamen then into third ventricle flows into cerebral aqueduct (opening in midbrain) then into fourth ventricle - CSF flows from superior to inferior direction
lobes of brain
frontal temporal occipital parielal
central sulcus separates
frontal and parietal lobes
WCST indicates what sort of brain damage? why?
frontal lobe due to memory deficit
dura mater
function of holding brain in place has folds in it
exmape of a drug used to treat chronic neuropathic pain
gabapentin
types of inhaled general anaesthetics
gas volatile liquids
which phase is favoured for the anaesthetic to reach the brain?
gas phase
why isn't gentomycin used to treat adults with an unknown cause of bacterial meningitis
gentomycin doesn't enter CSF in adults
anterior aa
go straight up between 2 hemispheres and then head in a posterior direction supply ant aspect of frontal lobes and white matter
benefits of spinal opioids
good for chronic pains
issues with genetic polymorphisms that affect drug metabolism
great variation in response of individuals to standard doses of drug therapy can lead to treatment failure or life-threatening adverse drug reactions in some patients
sulcus means
groove
substantia nigra is
group of dopamine producing cells die in parkinson's disease
neurobiology of exercise
growth factors cause connections and dendrites to develop in then brain exercise causes an increase in BDNF, FGF-2, VEGF and IGF-1 in the hippocampus BDNF and FGF-2 are made within the hippocampus due to changes in DNA methylation and histone modification, within the gene in the hippocampus, as a result of exercise VEGF and IGF-1 come from mm, through the circulatory system and then into brain- boost neurogenesis and synaptogenesis
nicotine replacement therapy
gums, patches, sprays ineffective in long-term smoking cessation- 1 yr quit rates not greatly affected
what is an extradural haemorrhage
haemorrhage is outside all the dura layers inc. the periosteal layer
what is a subarachnoid haemorrhage
haemorrhage within the subarachnoid space can be caused by trauma
action of PCP and Ket
hallucinogenic
impact of oil-gas partition coefficient on potency
halothane easily dissolves in lipids compared to N2O as has a low oil-gas partition coefficient thus, a high oil-gas partition coefficient permits an easier entry, of the anaesthetic, through the BBB.
Oil-gas partition coefficient and MAC values
halothane has a high oil-gas partition coefficient and a low MAC value N2O has a low oil-gas partition coefficient but a high MAC value halothane easily dissolves in lipids cimpared to N2O thus, a high oil-hgas partition coefficne,t that permits the etnru of the aneaesthtic through he BBB.
neuropathic pain and opioids
hard to treat neuropathic pain with opioids
feature of neurones of the spinal cord
have a peripheral receptive field recording from one neurone, from one part of spinal cord, can stimulate a particular part of the body
clinical effect of the OPRM1 A118G SNP
having at least 1 G allele means that the patient needs more opioid after surgery patients also had less pain relief
unilateral damage to the frontal lobe
head injury degenrative disease stroke surgery
most common presenting complains
headache head trauma seizure focal neurological deficit
diamorphine also called
heroin
changes in CSF due to bacterial infectious meningitis
high WBC count predominant cell type if neutrophiles are the predominant cell type CSF: serum glucose <0.5
a lower MAC no. associated with
high potent anaesthetics
red nucleus
highly vascularised important as location of extraperamital tract
brainstem is part of the
hindbrain
PGE2, PGI2 and PGD2 synergise with
histamine release from mast cells bradykinin release from blood cells
what is working memory
holding information of what you have just done
tentorium cerebelli
holds cerebellum in place
ventricles
holes that reach far in AP direction filled with CSF
common pathologies of ventricular system
hydrocephalus
relating inputs to the vomiting centre, to treatment
identify cause and find most appropriate drug e.g. if dealing with motion sickness, and thus, activation of the vestibular centre then use antihistamines (H1/ M1 antagonists) if dealing with infection gastroenteritis/ chemotherapy/ surgery of GIT that has activated the vagus, then 5HT3 receptor antagonists will be more effective in some cases, useful to initiate vomiting reflex
warning for use of bromocriptine
if you have a tendency to do particular things, need to be monitored whilst using bromocriptine bromocriptine will increase your compulsion to do certain activites e.g. sex, gambling, excessive eating/ spending
what is meant by tolerance of drugs? what causes this?
if you take an opioid repeatedly over time, its ability to produce analgesia reduced need a higher dose to get the same effect G-protein coupled receptors are prone to desensitisation and so need to activate a greater no. of receptors to get analgesia
role of imaging in stroke
image using CT if stroke is being cuased by haemorrhage, don't give an anti-clotting agent if stroke is caused by clot, treat with thrombolysis
Where does a subdural heamorrhage occur?
in between the dura and arachnoid layer, outside fo the hemisphere
C fibres arrive?
in the superficial dorsal horn of the spinal cord, where pain input arrives
pain signal pathway- way to remember
in through door-dorsal horn out through vent- ventral horn
dopamine release following sex
increased dopamine release
warnings about COX-2 inhibitors
increased risk of heart attack, stroke and cardiovascular death.
if a substance removes GABA from being released
increases dopamine release
effects of amphetamines
increases wakefulness and conc. decreased fatigue and appetite thus, performance enhancing increases euphoria, libido, energy, self-esteem, self-confidence, aggression increased BP and cardiovascular tone, tachycardia
types of i.v. general anaesthetics
inducing agents benzodiazepines dissociative anaesthesia
treatment of bacterial meningitis dependent on
infecting agent and risk factors for patient if patient is young or immunocompromised, treatment should be altered accordingly
why is PCR done for some infections
infections are harder to grow using microscopy techniques
transverse myelitis
infective and non-infective causes
CSF flowing in an
inferior direction but needs to go up and around brain (arrows on diagram)
what is encephalitis
inflammation of the brain
What is meningitis?
inflammation of the meninges
what is myelitis
inflammation of the spinal cord
functions of the dopamine pathways
influences motor function drives compusion and perserveration
result of increased blood flow
influx of inflammatory substances from the blood
tentorial tumours
infratentorial- common in cause of tumours in children, 50% supratentorial- common in adults, form of metastasis
categories of inhaled anaesthetics
inhaled i.v
other name for man-on-fire syndrome
inherited erythromelalgia (burning sensation)
hippocampus
initially curves posteriorly curls forward- lateral to medial curve function of memory spacial navigation
what does IMMPACT stand for
initiative on methods, measurements and pain assessment in clinical trials
largest aa in angriogram
internal carotid aa
which cistern is directly in front of the midbrain
interpeduncular cistern
pathologies associated with head trauma
intracranial haemorrhage
common pathologies of meninges
intracranial haemorrhages infections/ inflammatory diseases
Cyt P450 action
involved in drug metabolism and bioactivation- transform drugs into soluble molecules to be excreted
common pathologies of lobes, gyri and basal ganglia
ischmaemia (stroke) parenchumal haemorrhage tumour/ inflammation/ infection neurodengerative diseases
hence, why is acute pain useful
it acts as a protective mechanism
histamine causes
itch
common migraine is
just stage 2- unilateral throbbing headache
treatment stratergies
justice for drug offenders, crime, social security, NHS every pound spent on treatment saves a pound on health service and criminal justice costs
example of a dissociative anaesthesia
ketamine patient is unconscious but appears to be awake
define ataxia
lack of voluntary coordination of muscle movements
CT lateral view of skull
lamboid suture separates occipital and parietal squamosal suture separates frontal and parietal sinus
marginal sulcus used for
landmark for central sulcus (red-coloured part)
describe Aalpha and Abeta sensory axons (group I and group II mm axons)
large diameter myelinated fast condution velocity relay messages about proprioception and mechanosensitivity (non-painful e.g. touch, pressure)
subcortical blood supply
large part of cerebral hemispheres is white matter caudate is a c-shaped structure lenticulostriate aa- small stroke in basal ganglia can have dramatic consequences
corpus callosum
large white matter structure sits on top of ventricle
describe the receptor reserve for opioids
large- great no. of receptors on terminal only need to activate a proportion no. of receptors to get analgesia (if low tolerance)
stronger stimuli evoke
larger receptive potentials and thus, a greater number and higher frequency of action potentials frequency of firing encodes the painful stimulus
CSF exits through
lateral apertures CSF accumulates in places with space, called cistern
CSF circulation- flow
lateral ventricle > interventricular foramen > third ventricle > cerebral aqueduct > forth ventricle > cisterna magna > interpeduncular cistern > cisterna pontis
list of ventricles
lateral ventricles interventricular foramen fourth ventricle third ventricle cerebral aqueduct fourth ventricle
caudate nucleus located
laterally to ventricles moves in a lateral to medial direction
basal ganglia of brain-
layers inside putamen called pallidi external capsule is outside the putamen
effect of migraine attacks on platelet 5HT levels
levels depleted during migraine attacks urinary levels increase
issue when treating bacterial meningitis
limited treatment options
paracetamol metabolised in
liver
questions about pain?
location intensity description of pain- aching, burning, stabbing, shooting
supra and infra refer to
locations within tentorium
LC
locus ceruleus
what is fibromyalgia
long-term condition that causes pain all over the body. characterised by mm pain with stiffness and localised tenderness
describe the N-back task
looking for a repeating 2 letters and must make a response when you see the same thing then there is 2 back, where a response must be give when there are 2 letters the same with an alternate in the middle
internal carotid aa becomes
loops and goes sideways to become anterior and middle cerebral aa anterior cerebral aa run into the midlinmidline and anteirorly
why is codeine a poor analgesic
lots of genetic variance, some fatalities unpredictable anaesthetics
changes in CSF due to tuberculous infectious meningitis
low WBC count mononucleocytes are the predominant cell type CSF: serum glucose <0.3 high protein- 0.5 < X 3.0
why infection can be established in the CSF
low protein immune system not ready to clear organism as no complement, no innate immunity low IgG no lymphatics
normal CSF
low protein, between 0.2-0.4 g/L CSF glucose is lower than blood glucose, ratio of 0.5- need to do a blood glucose to compare ratio <5 white cells
a higher MAC no. associated with
lower potent anaesthetics
define prostrate
lying stretched out on the ground with one's face downwards.
changes in CSF due to cryptococcal infectious meningitis
lymphocytes respond to fungal infection and so high mononucleocyte count high protein- 0.5 < X 3.0 CSF: serum glucose <0.5 low WBC count
basilar aa
major cerebral aa feeds a lot of the brainstem rare to have a stroke
roles of PGI2 and PGE2
major role- hyperalgesia vasodilator- increase blood flow decrease platetel aggregation
white dots on brain function
make connections with CSF drains CSF into venous drainage system
what sits in between the cerebral peduncles
mammillary body
sphenoid sinus
maxillary sinus under orbit
nociceptors
mechanical (e.g. pinch) thermal (>37 degrees) chemical- inflammation
if thrombolysis unsuccessful at treating a clot-causing-stroke, treat with
mechanical thrombectomy
closest part of brain to spinal cord
medulla oblongata
temporal lobe function
memory contains hypocampus location/ navigation another language centre
deep layer of dura mater called
meningeal layer
purpuric rash associated with
meningitis disease
if signs of meningism co-exist with encephalitis, diagnosis
meningo-encephalitis
rash normally caused by
meningococcus
midbrain forms
mesencephalon
type of dopamine pathway
meso-limbic dopamine pathway
describe the descending inhibitory control of pain
message going into PAG, NRM input from LC collectively, desceding inhibitory control pathway is excitatory from PAG to NRM. pathway from NRM to spinal cord is INHIBITORY makes it harder for pain message to be sent to brain
MBSR for pain management in cases of fibromyalgia
meta-analysis significant improvement in short-term QoL of patients but no significant improvement in long-term
DOPAC and HVA are
metabolites
hindbrai divides into
metencephalon myelencephalon
agonist substitution for opiates
methadone treatment for opiate abuse- has a long half-life and doesn't activate receptors as strongly as opiates prevents opiate withdrawal and so blocks effects of illicit opiate use and decreases opiate craving if people are stable on methadone, can function in society reduces exposure to HIV by stopping injecting very low rate of complete cessation of heroin use in methadone patients hard to wean off methadone
cerebral aqueduct can be recognised as
mickey mouse's mouth
ambient cistern is located directly posterior to
midbrain
thalamus in continuation with
midbrain
3 areas of brain stem
midbrain pons medulla
age where prevalence of migraines peaks
middle age
aa that commonly ruptures in extradural haemorrhages
middle meningeal aa
what has been suggested, in the past, as potential causes of migraines?
migraine due to vascular disturbance - vascular theory due to a change in neurones- cortical spreading depression theory sensory nerve activation theory
effects of cannabis
mild euphoria effect in moderate doses dysphoric in high doses very low acute toxicity but some concerns about precipitation of psychosis in chronic heavy users. stimulates appetite through actions on feeding centres in the hypothalamus and possibly gut. analgesic
mindfulness on gray matter density
mindfulness increases gray matter density- cell bodies of neurones MRI scan before and after meditating
examples of mindfulness-based interventions
mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) love and kindness meditation progressive mm relaxation breathing meditation
activities that can affect behaviour, by mediating changes in the brain
mindset physical exercise yoga-mindfulness sleep
How is stage C of anaesthesia facilitated
monitoring to assure recovery
changes in CSF due to viral infectious meningitis
mononucleocytes are the predominant cell type protein- 0.4< X < 0.8 CSF: serum glucose >0.5 WBC count- 50-1000 cells/mm^3/106 cells/L
functions of serotonin pathways
mood memory processing sleep congnition
difference in drug use between students and convicts
more heroin use in convicts than students
pros of using numerical rating scale over verbal
more variance in pain and thus, more able to measure change in pain
examples of opiates
morphine, heroin, methadone, codeine
hindbrain
most acenstral and conserved part of brain
what's in the ventral horn
motor neurones
necessary inhaled dose of anaesthetic to prevent
movement to a standard surgical stimulus (skin incision) in 50% of patients
clinical relevance of CYP2D6 UM
much greater risk of opioid related-adverse events due to increased production of morphine benefits for not taking opioid metabolised by CYP2D6 serious adverse reactions inc respiratory depression, circulatory depression, shock, cardiac arest and death
sinuses scan
mucus circulates around sinuses and oral pharynx- clears pathogens blockage of mucus circulation can cause sinusitis
pharmacogenetics side effects with NSAIDs
mutations in cyt P2C9 can decrease the metabolic activity of this enzyme and increase the risk of NSAIDs side effects e.g poor metabolisation of celecoxib leads to elevated blood levels and the potential for adverse effects due to drug accumulation
cause of man-on-fire syndrome
mutations in the SCN9A gene thus, defective NaV1.7 channel, which is hypersensitive to stimuli
polymorphism refers to
mutations that exist in the population
antagonist to opioid receptors
naloxone
what is the stroop task
naming colours despite the colour of the text
examples of longer-acting analgesic NSAIDs
naproxen, piroxicam
lentiform nucleus
narrower medially than laterally
taxi driver experiment
need a huge memory a scan of the hippocampuses showed than the taxi drivers had different hippocampuses taxi drivers had less anterior hippocampus but had a larger posterior hippocampus correlation between no. yrs working as a taxi driver- greater no. months spent driving, the more different they are from their controls
Assessment of pain in dementia/ patients unable to communicate
need to assess pain by observation done by assessing: - Facial expression - Verbalisations - Body movements - Changes in interpersonal interactions - Changes inactivity patterns or routines - Mental status changes - Change in BP, respiratory rate etc.
recovery from second phase
needed due to being exhausted and unable to participate in regular exercise and activities
Different brain activation in expert meditators vs novices during focused meditation
neural correlates of attentional expertise in long-term meditation practitioners red areas are more active looking at brain activation when resting and meditating C has more active areas in those who are master meditators areas in blue are more active in novies
nociception describes
neural process of pain what happens when you put your hand over a flame
hypothalamus role in pain
neuroendocrine and stress responses to insult
what happens if CSF flow is impaired
not as much of an issue in children, skull expands builds up and enlarges ventricles causes neurological impairments treatment- surgery to drain CSF using a shunt and drain into adbomen
issues with spinal opioids
not compatible with daily life
rash in differential diagnosis
not diagnostic
basis of neuroplasticity- quote
neurones firing together wire together
low back/ spinal pain is a mixture of which types of pain? result of this?
neuropathic and nociceptive different treatments may be needed
side effects of chemotherapeutic agents
neuropathic pain
what are the changes in the brain a result of
neuroplasticity
amphetamines taken up by? affect?
nn ending releases dopamine and other amines on the nn ending
describe the features of the opthalmic division, of the trigeminal nn
nn has cell bodies, thus, cranial nucleus has bipolar neurone- has nn endings that project in both directions part of the sensory nervous system- takes afferent information to the CNS and releases neurotransmitters at both ends inferior end occurs in the dorsal horn of spinal cord and synapses with sensory input superior end, nn terminals are on meninges and blood vessels
neuropathic pain is due to
nn injury induced pain resulting from surgery, DM, chemotherapy
do patients always experience all phases
no
recruitment increases
no. of responsive receptors and their fibres increases their strength of their signal, into the CNS
categories for pain mechanism
nociceptive inflammatory neuropathic (dys)functional
neurones that specialise in pain called
nociceptive neurones
summary
nociceptors detect painful stimuli, high threshold C fibres are slower than Adelta fibres send message to dorsal horn of spinal cord messages in spinal cord cross to controlateral side and reach brainstem, cortex (conscious sensation) and limbic system
PGs enhance
nociceptors response to bradykinin (BK) increase sensitivity of nociceptors
signals to thalamus (blue line)
non-painful and painful stimuli
what are you looking for in the microbiology
normal CSF count or signs of inflammation or infection
describe the two neurone network
normally in the brain, there are excitatory and inhibitory pathways- a balance between them regulates the excitatory pathway. GABA inhibits the glutamateric pathway. Thus, if GABA neurones are activated, they release GABA onto the excitatory neurone, causing it to fire less. If the GABA neurone is not activated, glutamate is released from the glutamatergic and excitation occurs.
contraindications with lumbar puncture when diagnosing meningitis
not done until a CT head is done can lead to hernia due to difference in intracranial pressure risk of bleeding due to abnormal clotting
clinical relevance of CYP2D6 PM
not getting enough analgesia same frequency of side effects as normal metabolisers (1-8% of people)
development of tolerance to cocaine
not same level of tolerance as tolerance to opiates cocaine increases dopamine level if animal has previously been given cocain over a period of time, tolerance increases and so same dose doesn't give the same increase in dopamine levels. Thus, not the same level of euphoria
NAC
nucleus accumbens
NRM
nucleus reticularis paragigantoncellaris
spinal effect of opioids
opioid receptors are concentrated in the superficial horn of spinal cord- localised to the place where fibres that relay pain are terminated hence, can inhibit pain without inhibiting touch 70% of opioid receptors are on the presynaptic terminals (30% on postsynaptic terminals) C-fibre terminals is a powerful site of morphine action
difference between nociception and pain
pain is psychological nociception is activation of a pain pathway
why complex definition of pain
pain and injury (pathology) not always linked under stressful conditions, people and animals can suffer quite serious injuries without feeling the pain immediately- endogenous opioids. some people experience pain in the absence of a lesion
examples of synthetic opioids
pethidine fentanyl
how does morphine cause an excitation of descending inhibitory control pathway
opioid receptors in the brain are often on GABA neurones When morphine is released, it inhibits the GABA neurone as morphine is an inhibitory ligand This prevents the inhibition of the excitatory neurone so it fires more, causing more excitation. Hence, opioids cause a greater excitation (disinhibition) of the pathway. This is because of a greater opioid binding in the PAG that drives the PAG- NRM pathway and a greater opioid binding in the NRM that drives the NRM- spinal cord pathway The NRM-spinal cord pathway is inhibitory and so there is more inhibition. Opioid receptors in the spinal cord are inhibitory as well.
result of sudden withdrawal by heavily-dependent users in poor health
occasionally fatal heroin withdrawal is considered to be less dangerous than alcohol/ barbiturate withdrawal
specific treatment for
ommon, non-viral infectious causes of viral meningo-encephalitis
define contralateral
on the opposite side of the body
where does the parieto-occipital sulcus run
on the outside of the brain, all the way towards the midline
epidural space in spinal cord
on top of dura
epidural bleed
on top of dura skill is broken better prognosis as blood not pressing on brain, blood has somewhere to go
what do Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales do
only assess pain intensity
mechanism of pain
open sodium ion channels allow sodium to flow into cell and continue the processing of pain
where are opioid receptors found in the CNS and what is the affect?
opioid receptors present in PMG and NRM when morphine is given/ when endogenous opioids are released, ligands bind to receptors in PMG and NRM this actives more strongly the pathway from PAG to NRM and thus, actives the inhibitory response, in the spinal cord, more strongly thus, morphine activates the descending inhibitory control pathway and decreases excitation in the spinal cord
NSAIDs used in combination with? why?
opioids decrease post-operative pain
divisions of trigeminal nn
opthalamic (eye)- V1 maxillary (cheek)- V2 mandibular (lower face and jaw)- V3
opthalaic aa heads towards
optical structures
standard oral morphine used
oral morphine
fentanyl
orally active highly potent short duration used in anaesthetics and drug overdoses
pethidine
orally active less potent short duration used in labout
bioavilability, absorption and metabolism of aspirin
orally bio available rapid absorption, 75% metabolism in liver
frontal skull X-ray
orbit less dense than bone around as has less bone if fluid in sinus (dense and white) can indicate fracture of one of the sinus walls if someone has had a fracture of the orbit walls, air can leak into orbit and so hovers in an eyebrow line
example of condition that causes tissue damage
osteoarthritis
examples of when morphine is used as an analgesic drug
osteoarthritis to treat chronic pain
extra-axial haemorrhage means
outside brain
high doses of cocaine leads to
overactivity of sympathetic system (uptake blockade) hypertension tachycardia hyperpyrexia dilated pupil palpitations
describe the phase I metabolism of codeine
oxidised into morphine by CYP2D6, in the liver
physical exercise and attention
p value of 0.03 physical exercise had better attention and processing speed in brain can help with people with dementia
bradykinin causes
pain
allodynia
pain response to non-painful stimuli hard to treat L side of normal threshold common feature of chronic pain
categories of neuropathic pain
pain that affects the peripheral nerves- most common type of neuropathic pain pain that affects the spinal chord pain that affects the brain
Adelta and C sensory axons activated by? message relayed to?
painful stimuli message about painful stimuli relayed to spinal cord
another example of extreme pain disorders
paroxysmal extreme pain disorder
red pathway role
pathway in emotional aspects/ suffering of pain
people at risk of Spirochaetes
people who work with sewage people who canoe
cerebral aqueduct surrounded by
periaqueductal gray
PAG
periaqueductal grey matter
superficial layer of dura mater
periosteal layer
COX enzymes mainly found in
peripheral tissue
Teaching activity: Three people who have been genotyped for the opioid receptor OPRM1 A118G polymorphism and for the CYP2D6 alleles These people are about to undergo a surgical procedure and you are thinking of prescribing codeine to cope with post-operative pain. How effective will codeine be for each of the patients? Which patient has the highest risk of side effects? Would you recommend other type of analgesics (such as NSAIDs) rather than codeine to any of these patients? person A: AA genotype in opioid receptor and EM in CYP2D6 receptor. person B: GG genotype in opioid receptor and PM in CYP2D6 receptor. person C: AG genotype in opioid receptor and UM in CYP2D6 receptor.
person A: good pain relief from codeine as AA is normal variant and average risk of adverse side effects as normal processing of codeine - ok to use codeine person B: poor pain relief and average risk of adverse side effects. - safe to use codeine but not affective person C: suboptimal level of pain relief but high risk of adverse side effects - unsafe to use codeine
functions of frontal lobe
personality thinking attention motivation motor control
arachnoid granulations
pertrusions outside the arachnoid mater directly enters into superior sagital sinus, passing back into the venous circulation
describe drug metabolism
phase I- drug is oxidised by Cyt P450 so that the drug becomes more polarised and a chemically active compound phase II- conjugation- more water-soluble, less active and be excreted in urine
where is AA derived from
phospholipid bilayer of cells
physical exercise on adult neurogenesis
physical exercise increases adult neurogenesis neurogenesis happens in the red U red are basic stem cells and proliferate stem cells some cells leave proliferation stage and become neuroblasts (green) and then fully grown neurones this process takes around 28 days exercise increases no. proliferating cells in the brain Ki67 is maker that stains cells that are proliferating, not dividing- this increases with exercise cells need to differentiate into fully functioning neurones- exercise helps with fully differentiating neurones some cells die before they become neurones
layer tightly wrapped around the gyri
pia mater
subcomponents of executive function inc
planning behaviour inhibitory control attentional flexibility working memory monitoring
initial feeling associated as the prequel to addiction
pleasure
difference between treatment of pneumococcus and meningococcus
pneumococcus needed to be treated for longer than meningococcus
causes of anterior horn cell myelitis
polio enterovirus 71 some arboviruses rabies virus
metencephalon becomes
pons cerebellum
CSF can accunlate between
pons and medulla in cisterna pontis
4 possible phenotypes of CYP2D6
poor metaboliser- PM intermediate metaboliser- IM extensive metaboliser- EM ultra-rapid metaboliser- UM
absence of fever indicates
poor prognosis
what is opium extracted from
poppy juice
proprioceptors detect
position of Body
cerebral blood supply
post and ant circulatory system
parieto-occipital sulcus runs
posterior end of brain runs in a superior-inferior direction
example of peripheral type of neuropathic pain
postherpetic neuralgia neuropathic pain following shingles Diabetes mellitus
what happens when morphine binds to the postsynaptic µ-opioid receptor
potassium leaves cell any transmitter bound that manages to be released and binds to its postsynaptic receptor, finds it harder to depolarise membrane pathway harder to activate any transmitter that gets through is blocked
function of PGE2, PGI2 and PGD2
powerful vasodilators
where are µ opioid receptors present
pre and postsynaptic terminals
Haemophilus type b (Hib)- history
pre-treatment- caused meningitis in children flare up of cases lead to a booster vaccine being introduced, creates for long-term immunity
what is important when talking about abuse of a substance
predisposing factors in the individual genetics environment
N-back assesses
prefrontal function
define antitussive
prevent or relieve cough
causes of vasculitis transverse myelitis**
primary infection e.g. VZV, TB, syphilis, schistosmiasis post infection- MMR, upper respiratory infections
precentral gyri
primary motor cortex
characteristics of emesis
protective reflex (to expel ingested toxins) shown in man and most meal-feeding mammals (rats can't vomit), and is associated with nausea
inferior posterior cerebrellar aa
provides blood supply to very posterior aspect of the cerebellum
arachnoid space in spinal cord
purple space
example of stimulus driven behaviour
putting on a pair of glasses you find on the table
pros of Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales
quick easy to use fairly reliable
issues with crack
rapid dependence
what do the PGs do when there is an inflammtory response
rapid generation of PGE2 and PGI2 by local tissue cells and blood vessles vasodilation presence of mast cells that release PGD2 and histamine chronic inflammation recruits monocytes and macrophages macrophages release PGE2 and TXA2 multiple cells generate PGs at site of injury
Spirochaetes carried by
rats
issues with tolerance
repeated dosing of opioid lose receptor capacity of receptor population less analgesic affect and so need to take more and more opioids
what is the RAT system
recognise assess treat
why is there not always a pathophysiological consequence to tolerance of opioids
recycling can occur
neural changes underlying successful second language word learning using fMRI
red shows how different those who successfully learnt vs those who were unsuccessful some areas of the brain are more active in relating to tone discrimination
PGE2, PGI2 and PGD2 collectively cause
redness and increase blood flow potentiate the generation of histamine and bradykinin on blood vessels and peripheral nn positive feedback loop
Meningitis and steroids
reduce long morbidity in Hib meningitis (dexamethasone) Give prior to antibiotics for beneficial effect concern if resistant strain antibiotic penetration may be affected
if a substance increase GABA release
reduction in dopamine release
motor neurones important for
reflex pathway
what do 5HT-1D heteroreceptors do
regulate the release of the other neurotransmitter, CGRP, reducing CGRP release
examples of genetic variation in the mu-opioid receptor
rs1799971 (G) allele in the OPRM1 gene causes the normal amino acid at residue 40, asparagine (Asn), to be replaced by aspartic acid (Asp) this SNP is also called A118G, N40D or Asn40Asp
inferior sagittal sinus
runs along the cygulate gyrus
posterior cerebral aa
runs towards temporal lobe feeds inf surface of teporal lobe hippoycampus medial aspect of occipital lobe
how do neonates acquire Group B streptococci and Escherichia coli
rupture in membranes of mother's birth canal**
bleed in subdural space
rupture of connecting veins of the sagittal sinus blood fills up space between dura (pink) and subarachnoid (arachnoid mater)
layers of the brain's support and protection
scalp periosteum bone dura mater archnoid mater pia mater
diseases that cause radiation of pain
sciatica
what do signals from nociceptor afferents activate
second order neurones in spinal cord
why are new neurones important
sedentery- fewer neurones exercise increases no. neurones thought transmission is more effective if brain is densely packed with neurones
examples of a experimental tasks to precisely assess specific executive processes- assessing attentional control
selecting task relevant information
ability to detect different types of sensations
selectivity of receptors that detect stimuli
sensory system is made up of
sensory receptors at the end of nn (found in skin) receptors, when activated, send AP to spinal cord spinal cord has neurones that are activated.
dorsal normally associated with
sensory system
parietal lobe functions
sensory system intergrating sensory info language centre
flax cerebelli
separates cerebellar hemispheres
what is 5HT
serotonin
3rd stage migraine treatments used in
sever attack and or those going on for more than 2 months
brief pain inventory
several questions asking pain intensity 7 questions that looks at how pain has interfered with other aspects of life/ function e.g. mood, normal activities, relationships, sleep, normal work, enjoyment of life
hypothalamus
sex function regulate circadian rhythm thirst hunger endocrine system
issues with Triptans
short-acting poor CNS penetration*
MBSR for pain management in cases of low back pain
short-term significant benefit on pain long-term, no significant improvement on pain
middle aa
shunting device prevents inhibition of blood flow 90% of strokes occur in this aa ascends through lateral sulcus and has largest teritory supplies lateral temporal, parietal and frontal lobe
what do opioid receptors have in common
similar function esp. µ and δ made up of 7 transmembrane spanning regions coupled to Go/Gi proteins Inhibit adenylate cyclase and reduce CAMP alter ion channels
most common polymorphisms
single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNIPs)
intensity of stimulus encoded by
size of responding receptor population and the no. of fibres activates
C fibres come from
skin
feature of peripheral receptive fields
small able to discriminate where the sensation is coming from
thalamus
small sits directly above midbrain important for sensory system- perception of pain
THC mimics effects of
small endogenous lipid messengers e.g. anandamide
describe Adelta sensory axons
smaller diameter finely myelinated reasonable conduction velocity signal painful and non-noxious stimuli high mechanical and high thermal threshold stimuli
crack administration
smoked
tobacco preferred methods of admin
smoking cigarettes better than chewing tobacco
use of opioids
socially medically for 1000 yrs
causes of epidural bleed
some form of trauma
cons of Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales
some patients struggle with quantifying their pain thus, use other types of scales to assess pain intensity
reflections create
spaces within the dura meningeal layer
thalamus plays role in
spacial discriminatory aspects
blue pathway role
spacial discriminatory aspects of pain
what happens in retching
sphincter doesn't open and nothing is ejected
importance of difference between C and A fibres
spinal cord able to tell if input is painful or not
meninges surround
spinal cord and brain
examples of spinal type of neuropathic pain
spinal injury MS arachnoiditis syrinx tumour
TRESK K2P (potassium channel) is found in
spinal neurones and dorsal root ganglia, involved in pain pathways
what are withdrawal reflexes
spinally-mediated nociceptive events that result in the withdrawal from the stimulus
describe the cortical spreading depression thoery
spread of depolarisation in neurones starting from visual cortex and spreading forward, as a wave of depolarisation- cortical spreading depression this activates neurones and triggers the migraine attack
descending inhibitory control of pain
starts in cortex and sends message to PAG signal from PAG to NRM (part of medulla) NRM projects to spinal cord and activates an inhibitory pathway, using inhibitory transmitters inhibitory transmitters suppress pain signalling in the spinal pathway - starts as an excitation and ends as an inhibitory consequence in spinal cord - activated during stress-induced analgesia - LC releases NA in spinal cord and also inhibits signalling - bidirectional pathway.
first drugs specifically designed for migraines?
still in clinical trial CGRP receptor antagonists Monoclonal antibodies
hyerpalgesia
stimuli that normally evoke a small pain response, evoke a large pain response R side of normal threshold common feature of chronic pain
normal response to painful stimulus
stimulus response function receptive threshold after which you experience pain, in a linear relationship, until it plateaued off.
3 sinsus thatfeed into confluence
straight sinus superior sagittal sinus occiptal sinus
rash can also be caused by
streptococcus, Hib sepsis and enteroviral infection
pathologies assocaited with focal neurological deficit
stroke
examples of brain type of neuropathic pain
stroke MS tumour epilepsy syrinx
degree of dependence liability of Benzodiasepines
strong difficult to wean off
types of neuroimagine
structural functional
HRQoL used in
studies of epidemiological impact of pain
all of aa and vv that supply the brain are found in
subarachnoid space
between 2 layers of the arachnoid mater is the
subarachnoid space
unilateral damage to frontal lobe leads to what type of damage
subcortical and cortical
spaces in brain
subdural epidural subarachnoid
what type of haemorrhage has a cresenteric-shaped haemorrhage? why?
subdural haemorrhage follows convexity of the cerebral hemisphere as not limited by sutures
examples of peptide substances released when bradykinin acts on the sensory nn
substance P
peptide from vomiting centre
substance P
central and precentral sulci also run in a
superior-inferior direction
inferior anterior cerebellar aa
supplies most anterior aspect of the cerebellum
superior cerebrellar aa
supplies vast majority of cerebellum
affect of opioids
suppressants
CT of skull
sutures don't join until second yr of life
induction of vomiting
swallow pill to cause vomiting
alternatives to opioids
switch route of admin e.g. change to s.c. or epidural spinal opioid- epidural/ intrathecal
what happens when tissue is damage
synthesis of eicosanoids is driven, thus, production of PGs PGs found at site of tissue damage
analogues of substances with a similar effect to morphine
synthetic endogenous
midbrain can be located using
tails can be located using mammillary bodies
interventional neuroradiology
take a catheter and put into cerebral vessels pass smaller tubes within the aneurysm and drop titanium and platinum coils- these exclude aneurysm from circulation repeat of a cerebral angiogram should show the aneurysm to be excluded from circulation
amphetamine action
taken up into nn endings increases release of dopamine
1st step in treating migraines
taking NSAIDs e.g. paracetamol, diclofenac take early in attack don't help with aura
mesencephalon divides into
tectum (sup and inf colliculi) tegmentum cerebral peduncles
lateral sulcus marks division between
temporal and frontal (and some parietal)
other identifiable feature of the brain
temporal lobe (where arrow is pointing)
issues with congenital insensitivity to pain
tend to die in childhood due to injuries or illness going unnoticed children with this illness often sustain damage in and around the oval cavity e.g. bitting off the tip of their tongue. they can also suffer from fractures to bones, have unnoticed infection or suffer burn injuries
example of an indirect effect toxin that causes neuritis
tetanus/ botulism
diencephalon becomes
thalamus hypothalamus
third ventricle near
thalamus and hypothalamus location
cisterna pontis sits between
the PONS and the medulla oblongata
what is neuroplasticity
the ability of the brain to change in response to the envirnoment
what does the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) measure
the ability to learn concepts and considered a good measure of frontal lobe functioning rule is as you take a card from the pack you place it under the card with the same no. of items. someone says wrong and patient then has to sort cards according to a different type of class e.g. put card under other cards with the same colour
what is temporal/ recency memory assessing for
the ability to remember the order of events/ actions
cocaine comes from
the alkaloid that is extracted from the coca tree
what is the cortical spreading depression theory now thought to be the cause of
the aura but not the migraine attack itself backed up by an MRI experiment
what does the interpeduncular cistern sits between
the cerebral peduncles
definition of potency of drug
the higher the potency of the drug, the less of the drug required to give benefits the minimum alveolar conc. (MAC)
hence, what is 5HT invovled in
the migraine attack
opioids agonists inhibit
the release of excitatory transmitters from the afferent nn fibres that relay the pain message inhibit neurones release in GIT, lungs and gut
Executive function is required when
the situation requires a response that competes with a strong, habitual response- something you routinely do but have to do something else a novel solution is required or the task is not well learnt the situation requires error correction or troubleshooting
blood-gas partition coefficient is associated with
the speed of induction and recovery to the anaesthetics- speed of anaesthesia
calcarine sulcus is the location of
the visual cortex
what does the elevated CGRP levels, during a migraine, indicate
this neuronal pathway is activated during migraine attacks and so releases its neuronal peptide content
role of TXA2 (thromboxane)
thrombotic vasoconstrictor
each thalamus conntected by
tiny white matter structure, ventricles
when need to access CSF
to eliminate diagnosis of meningitis
uses of benzodiazepines
to reduce anxiety
Superior anastomotic vein of Trolard
top arrow
mechanoreceptors detect
touch pressure vibration
posterior/ caudal
towards the back
caudal part of brain
towards the back of brain
anterior/ rostral
towards the front
name of the stalks that connect the 2 layers of arachnoid mater
trabeculae
other drugs affected by CYP2D6 genetic variation
tramadol guidelines for prescribing based on someone's genotype
What is NaV1.7 responsible for? how?
transmitting the pain signal in pain-specialised neurones It does so by mediating the inward sodium current of excitable cells, which is responsible for generating and propagating APs in neurones
uses of Benzodiasepines
treating anxiety
true or false: Giving analgesics regularly will sometimes start drug dependence
true
true or false: Patients with major illnesses have more pain
true
pathologies associated with seizures
tumour, congenital abnormality
pathologies associated with headache
tumour, inflammation, infection
treatment dependent on
type of pain
Bleed in subarachnoid space
type of stroke called subarachnoid haemorrage
vomiting centre found
under cerebellum midline
second phase of migraine
unilateral throbbing headache
features of C fibres
unmyelinated conduct slowly, slow conduction velocity small diameter act be activated by a range of painful stimuli polymodal- respond to mechanical, thermal (hot and cold), chemical (inflammatory)
foods with high listeria contents
unpasteurised cheese
characteristics of nausea
unpleasant sensation that immediately proceeds vomiting. A cold sweat, pallor, salivation, self absorption, loss of gastric tone, duodenal contractions, and reflux of intestinal contents into the stomach often accompany nausea.
what is Chemoprophylaxis
use of drugs to prevent disease
angiograms visulaise aa
used if suspect stroke sagittal angiogram- 1st coronal angiogram- 2nd
uses of inducing vomiting
useful if patient has taken an overdose of tablets or if patient has taken too much alcohol can't use in patients who may have a respiratory impact
How is stage B of anaesthesia facilitated
using inhaled anaesthetics as the rate and level of distribution, within the patient, is easier to monitor
treatment for group A meningococcus
vaccine
treatment for pneumococcal meningitis
vaccine
why is haemophilus influenzae type b now uncommon
vaccine found
partial receptor agonists in smoking and opioid cessation
varenicline and buprenorphine increases levels of dopamine and decrease demand on receptor
vomiting centre activated by
variety of stimuli Iatrogenic (e.g. chemotherapy, radiotherapy, opiates, antibiotics) Drugs e.g. alcohol Motion sickness and Meniere's disease Pregnancy Poisoning (e.g. ethanol) Gastroenteritis and stimulation of the pharynx Meningitis and intracranial haemorrhage (raised pressure) Bulimia nervosa- psychosocial reflex
CGRP causes
vasodilation and local inflammation of the meninges causing the migraine
role of PGD2
vasodilator decrease platelet aggregation
arbovirus infections transmitted by
vectors: mosquitoes ticks sandflies
spaces within the dura meningeal layer contain? called?
veins dural venous sinuses (venous spaces)
people on contraceptive pill more likely to develop
venous sinus thrombosis
anatomical terms in reference in brainstem
ventral is closer to tummies dorsal becomes closer to backs
where are the cell bodies in the meso-limbic dopamine apthway
ventral tegmental area (VTA)
simple executive function tests
verbal fluency sequenced movements interpretation/ abstraction
issues with CYP2D6
very variable
causes of Encephalomyelitis
viral and non-viral primary infection/ post infecitous direct invasion, vasculitis (interupts blood supply) or immune response to infection
occipital lobe function
visual
what is emesis
vomiting
reflex of vomiting coordinated by
vomiting centre
thermoreceptors detect
warm cool hot
degree of dependence liability of cannabis? why has this change?
weak stronger strains e.g. skunk with greater THC are causing a greater degree of dependency
CTZ characteristics
weak BBB can detect chemical many receptors on neurones
PGs produce their biological effects through actions at
well defined receptors
when does the 4th stage of the depth of anaesthesia occur
when things go wrong
non-painful inputs arrive?
where blue dot is, lower down in dorsal horn of spinal cord
cerebral hemsiphere
white matter cortex
Proposed mechanisms of action of general anaesthetics
will either block 5HT3 receptor, neuronal nicotinic receptors or glutamate receptors the blocking of these receptors will dampens down the system and promotes anaesthesia also want to activate inhibition which can be achieved by activating the GABA A receptor/ glycine and promotes inhibition by inhibiting sodium into cell and thus, excitation
how does encephalopathy present
with an altered level of consciousness, cognition, behaviour or personality persisting for more than 24 hours and 2 of more of: - Fever/ history of fever (≥38°C) - Seizures and/or focal neurological findings - CSF pleocytosis (>4 WBC/µL) - EEG findings compatible with encephalitis - Abnormal results of neuroimaging (with evidence of brain parenchyma involvement)
pain signals are set up with
withdrawal reflexes
action of THC
works on Gi protein-coupled receptor cannabinoid receptors inhibits neurotransmitter release in brain
what happens during the prodrome attack
yawning mood or appetite change
facial X-ray, angle looks up chin
yellow is mandible if someone has had a blow to the head, the 'elephant trunk' is disrupted
arachnoid mater
yellow substance, membrane
Do NSAIDs reduce pain and inflammation?
yes
morphine receptor
µ opioid receptor
receptors that opioids act at
µ-, δ-, κ-receptors
Describe neuropathic pain
• Caused by a lesion or disease of the sensory nervous system • Tissue injury may not be obvious • Does not have a protective function • Descriptors - Burning, shooting, pins and needles, numbness • Less localised
give the definition of pain
• "An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage or described in terms of such damage" • "Pain is a subjective experience that can be perceived directly only by the sufferer. It is a multidimensional phenomena which can be described by pain location, intensity, temporal aspects, quality, impact and meaning. Pain does not occur in isolation but in a specific human being in psycho-social, economic and cultural contexts that influence the meaning, experience and verbal and non-verbal expression of pain."
Describe nociceptive pain
• 'Good' type of pain • Sensation associated with the detection of potentially tissue-damaging noxious stimuli e.g. touching hot object • Body's natural, reflexive response • High threshold type of pain • Stimulation of nocicpetor • Protective
historical techniques of anaesthetics
• 'knock-out' blows to the head • carotid artery compression • ingestion of ethanol and herbal mixtures
features of general anaesthetics
• Alters central neural processing • Readily reversible loss of consciousness with a decreased response to painful stimuli and muscle tone • Divided into inhalation and intravenous anaesthetics
list of the effect of morphine, acting via a µ-opioid receptor
• Analgesia • Euphoria / dysphoria • Tolerance (major issue) • Dependence • Constipation (40 % on oral opioids)- doesn't show same tolerance profile as analgesia • Anti-tussive
Properties of NSAIDs
• Anti-inflammatory • Analgesic • Antipyretic
McGill pain questionaire
• Assesses pain quality and characteristics • Assess pain using categories of words that the patient tickets off: - Sensory - Affective - Evaluative e.g. how the individual interprets their experience of pain
what do patients want from an analgesic
• At least 50% pain reduction • No worse than mild pain • Relief from related problems - Sleep disturbance, improved mood • No side effects • Those who get better do well - Improvements in fatigue, mood, and sleep, general measures of function, QoL and ability to work - All of this is near impossible and so must set realistic expectations from patients
IMMPACT measurement of physical functioning
• BPI pain interference scores
IMMPACT measurement of emotional functioning
• Beck Depression Inventory • Profile of Mood States - only one needs to be done
features of local anaesthetics
• Block generation and conduction of nerve impulses at local contact site • Consciousness is maintained
routes of infection of meningitis
• Blood-borne- invade blood and then direct invasion into CSF- common • Can spread from infections in different areas • Spread if CSF in other areas e.g. ear • Parameningeal suppuration e.g.otitis media, sinusitis • Direct spread through if defect in the dura e.g. post surgery, trauma • Direct spread through the cribriform plate (rare)
types of multi-dimensional pain assessment tools
• Brief Pain Inventory • McGill Pain Questionnaire • Neuropathic Pain Scale • Leeds Assessment of Neuropathic Symptoms and Signs (LANSS) scale • HRQoL
transmission of tactile messages
• Central branches of touch afferent fibres ascend in the dorsal columns • Synapse in the dorsal column nuclei • Cross the midline in the medulla • Ascend through the brainstem, contralaterally, to the medial lemnisus and then onto the thalamaus • In the thalamus, synapse with cells in various ventral posterior regions (ventral posterior medial and ventral posterior lateral nuclei) • From the thalamus, projections are sent to the primary somatosensory cortex (S-I), postcentral gyrus of parietal lobe- tight mapping of surface of body onto the cortex to discriminate regions.
clinical uses of opioids
• Choice of opioid • Tolerance - higher plasma concentration to achieve same pharmacological effect • Opioid is influenced by pain sensitivity • Route of administration govern the speed of onset and duration of effect
burden of long-term pain
• Depression • Sleep disturbances • Fatigue • Impaired physical functioning • Impaired concentration • Time off work • Possibly lose job • Less active
why do we assess pain
• Determine severity and impact of pain • Evaluating treatment outcome • Stratifying and personalising treatments • Screening for undiagnosed pain
what is involved in recognising pain
• Does the patient have pain? • Do other people know the patient has pain e.g. nursing staff, physio
facts (ish) about pain
• Everyday pain is an almost universal experience • Some people have genetic abnormalities which means that they are unable to experience pain • Usually pain warns us that we have injured ourselves in some way • Pain, particularly acute pain, usually gets better with time and may not need to be treated • Pain is an ambiguous perception • All pain is affected by how we are feeling at the time • and what about pleasurable pain e.g. gym- pain not an indication of damage but a sign of an activity enjoyed
describe cancer pain
• Features of acute and chronic pain • Can affect all organs of the body - May be acute on chronic • Often mixed inflammatory and neuropathic pain (due to compression of nn) • Usually worsens over time if untreated
side effects of paracetamol
• Few side-effects with therapeutic doses • Regular intake at high doses over long period: risk kidney damage • Toxic doses: nausea and vomiting, fatal liver damage
NSAID side effects
• GI disturbances • Skin reactions
what is involved in assessing pain
• How severe is the pain- expressions can give an indication of pain? - What is the pain score? - How is the pain affecting the patient? • What type of pain is it? - Acute or chronic? - Cancer or non-cancer? - Nociceptive or neuropathic? • Are there other factors? - Physical e.g. what activities is it stopping them from doing relates to the treatment they will want - Psychological?
action of aspirin
• Irreversible inactivation of COX-1/2 enzyme has to be resynthesised
methods of taking cocaine
• Leaves chewed in Peru etc, cocaine hydrochloride • Snorted (hydrochloride; can cause perforation of nasal septum), or smoked with tobacco
describe pathological pain
• Maladaptive- pain itself the underlying pathological process • Results from abnormal functioning of the nervous system • Disease states caused by damage to the nervous system (neuropathic pain) or by its abnormal function (dysfunctional pain)- both are a result of damage to the CNS.
neurophysiology of Abeta fibres
• Myelinated fibres • Fast conduction velocity • Terminate in intermediate lamina (III-IV) of the dorsal horn • Glutamate transmitter, non-painful transmission • Responses sensitive to Glutamate receptor (AMPA receptor) antagonists
what is the plasticity of spinal responses
• Neuronal responses to repeated stimulation of C-fibres are not fixed and are not always proportional to the intensity of the stimulus applied • Enhanced responses (facilitated response, called wind up) for a given noxious stimulus are associated with repeated higher (0.5Hz) stimulation • Spinal neurones are sensitised to the noxious stimulus- called central sensitisation ability to facilitate altered response explains sustained sensation in patients with chronic pain
describe the antipyretic action of NSAIDs
• Normal body temperature regulated by hypothalamus • Fever due to disturbance in hypothalamic thermostat • NSAIDs reset thermostat due to inhibition of prostaglandin production, in hypothalamus • Temperature regulating mechanisms reduce temperature
describe inflammatory pain
• Obvious tissue injury or illness • Associated with tissue damage and infiltration of immune cells (acute inflammatory response)- promotes repair by causing pain hypersensitivity, until healing occurs • Protective response • Descriptors - Sharp and/or dull - Aching - Throbbing • Well localized- only affect area of tissue damage • May be secondary hyperalgesia around the area of the wound, but tends to be relatively small
describe the analgesic action of NSAIDs
• Pain associated with inflammation / tissue damage • Reduce inflammation (oedema and vasodilation) which causes pain
describe chronic pain
• Pain lasting for more than 3 months • Pain lasting after normal healing • Sometimes no identifiable cause • May be no obvious pathologic process • Intensity unrelated to tissue injury • Unpredictable time course- 2 days or several weeks • Difficult to treat
describe acute pain
• Pain of recent onset and probable limited duration- no longer than 3 months • Obvious tissue injury (e.g. injury, operation, burn) • Varying severity • Intensity related to extent of injury • Predictable time course • Treatments usually successful
Taking a Pain History
• Precipitating/Alleviating Factors: - What causes the pain? What aggravates it? What makes it better? Has medication or treatment worked in the past? • Quality of Pain: - Ask the patient to describe the pain, by suggestion 1/2 words using words like "sharp", dull, stabbing, burning" • Radiation- neuropathic, myofascial (muscular) pain - Does pain exist in one location or radiate to other areas? • Severity - Have patient use a descriptive, numeric or visual scale to rate the severity of pain. • Timing (rhythm) - Is the pain constant or intermittent, when did it begin, and does it pulsate or have a rhythm
what is involved in treating pain
• What non-pharmacological treatments can I use? • What pharmacological treatments can I use?
definition of anaesthesia
• Provision of insensibility to pain during surgical, obstetric, therapeutic and diagnostic procedures • Involves monitoring and restoration of homeostasis during the postoperative period • Requires application of pharmacology, pathophysiology and biotechnology
onset/ duration of effect for different opioids
• Route of administration / formulation • Not important for continual analgesia but essential for as needed-basis of treatment • Intravenous-2 min. average for most opioids • Intramuscular- lipophilic drug: 20 min. • Oral - normal release 1 hour - sustained 2-4 hours
transmissio of pain signals
• Signal arrives from periphery and travels into top of spinal cord, dorsal horn. • Synapse in the dorsal column nuclei • From the dorsal horn, the signals are integrated and then the message crosses to the contralateral side and travels to the higher brain centres. • Pain tracks cross at the level of the spinal cord
examples of ascending pain pathways
• Spinothalamic tract (STT) from Laminae I and V to the thalamus (blue)- spacial discriminatory pathway • Post-synaptic dorsal column (PSDC) pathway • Spinoreticular tract (SRT) • Spinomesencephalic pathway
the ideal inhalation anaesthetic
• Stable over range of temperatures • Not degraded by light • Odourless- don't want to educe the gag-reflex • Analgesic, anti-emetic and muscle relaxation properties- don't want mm twitching in surgery • Minimal respiratory depression • Minimal cardiovascular effects • Is excreted completely by the respiratory system • Not metabolised or no active metabolites
describe (dys)functional pain
• Substantial pain but no noxious stimulus and no, or minimal, peripheral inflammatory pathology- associated with function of nervous system • No neuronal damage (i.e. functional problem) • treatments are only successful for a small proportion of people- need to change mindset of patient and thus, use of psychological-based treatments • Conditions include: fibromyalgia, irritable bowel syndrome, tension type headache, temporomandibular joint disease, interstitial cystitis
describe acute non-cancer pain
• Symptom of tissue injury or illness • Usually nociceptive or inflammatory • Occasionally neuropathic e.g. sciatica due to compression of nerves
issues with aspirin used in the long-term
• Therapeutic doses gastric bleeding (5/6mls blood loss) (Yr 2 AS lectures) • Anti-platelet function (prevents heart attacks) • large doses: dizziness, deafness and tinnitus • toxic doses: uncompensated respiratory acidosis, metabolic acidosis • 2nd highest cause of gastric ulcers • epidemiological link with encephalitis if given to children with viral infection
neurophysiology of C-fibres
• Unmyelinated fibres • Slower conduction velocity • Terminate in superficial lamina (I-II) of the dorsal horn • Release peptides e.g. substance P • Responses sensitive to Glutamate receptor (AMPA and NMDA receptor) and peptide receptor antagonists
types of Uni-dimensional pain assessment scales
• Visual analogue scale (VAS) • Numerical rating scale (NRS)- 0 is no pain, 10 is the worst pain imaginable • Verbal rating scale (VRS)- using a range of verbal descriptors e.g. mild, moderate, severe
describe the second stage of the depth of anaesthesia
• cortical inhibitory centres depressed • increased muscle tone • vomiting- give an antiemetic agent pre anaesthetic dose to prevent vomiting • temperature control lost due to effects on hypothalamus- patient kept on heating blanket/ pad, prevent suffering of hypothermia • a-rhythm of EEG desynchronised • respiration increased / irregular
describe the fourth stage of the depth of anaesthesia
• loss of respiration • EEG waves leads to small which is lost • death
describe the first stage of the depth of anaesthesia
• reduction higher cortical function • consciousness not lost - but thoughts blurred • reflexes present • smell and pain lost at end of this stage
describe the third stage of the depth of anaesthesia
• slow synchronised EEG rhythms • regular slow breathing • medullary centres depressed • reflexes lost • pupils dilated and so are sensitive to light
clinical examples of the use of local anaesthetics
• topical - nasal mucosa and wound margins • infiltration - vicinity of peripheral nerve endings and major nerve trunks in dental practice • regional - intravenous injection leading to numbing of a larger area of the body in labour/childbirth