Title: Pain and Analgesic Pathways
1 Pain and Analgesic Pathways
- Robert B. Raffa, Ph.D.
- Professor of Pharmacology
- Temple University
- School of Pharmacy School of Medicine
2Current Knowledge
- Different types of pain, not just different
degrees of pain - Multiple chemical mediators of pain
- Optimal therapy matches the analgesic(s) with the
type(s) of pain
3Types of Pain
- Nociceptive
- normal physiology (mechanisms known)
- beneficial
- treated with conventional analgesics (NSAIDs,
acetaminophen, opioids) - unrelieved, it becomes deleterious
- Neuropathic
- aberrant physiology (mechanisms unknown)
- poor quality of life
- difficult to treat
4Normal Pain Pathways
cortex
thalamus
- Tissue injury
- histamine
- bradykinin
- etc.
lateral spino- thalamic tract
dorsal root ganglion
primary afferent
Fig 3-25
5Normal Pain Pathways
PAG (periaqueductal gray)
locus ceruleus
raphe nuclei
Enkephalin-containing interneuron
Fig 3-25
6sharplocalized
Primary (1o) Afferents
dullvague
Ad
C
7REVIEW QUESTION
- Which is/are TRUE?
- Pain can be beneficial
- Pain can be harmful
- Nociception is normal
- C-fibers transmit sharp, localized pain
8Multiple types in injury
In many injuries and chronic disorders (e.g.,
arthritis, cancer), there are multiple sources
and types of tissue injury and, thus, multiple
sources and causes (types) of pain.
9Current Analgesics Options
- NSAIDs 1970s
- opioids 1970s
- tramadol 1980s 1990s
- COX-2 inhibitors 1990s
- acetaminophen unknown
- combinations
- adjuncts
10WHO Analgesic Ladder
Step 3 Strong opioids (e.g., morphine) with or
without non-opioids
Severe Moderate Mild
Step 2 Weak opioids (e.g., codeine) with or
without non-opioids
Step 1 Non-opioids (e.g., NSAIDs, acetaminophen
paracetamol)
11Underutilization and Control
12Sites of Action
13Sites of Action
Local Anesthetics (voltage-gated Na channels)
14Sites of Action
Opioids (m, d, k)
15Sites of Action
Acetaminophen ?
16REVIEW QUESTION
- The WHO analgesic ladder is a guide to the
proper dose of analgesic - True
- False
17Resistant Pains
- Migraine
- Neuropathic pain
- Sickle cell pain
- etc.
18Migraine
- Periodic, pulsatile headaches. Familial disorder
that usually begins in childhood or early
adulthood and tends to decrease in frequency in
later life. - Possible causes (1) humoral disturbance that
alters vascular responsiveness which in turn
elicits pain, or (2) a neurological disturbance
in the meninges, from which pain and vasomotor
changes result. More specifically, could be due
to vascular changes triggered by 5-HT release, to
a neuronal abnormality, or excess activity of
peptidergic nerve terminals in meningeal vessels.
The release of 5-HT also leads to local
inflammatory response and the release of other
mediators (e.g., bradykinin and prostaglandins)
that act on nociceptive nerve terminals, causing
pain and also releasing neuropeptides which
further reinforce and prolong the pain. Afferent
nerve terminals in blood vessel walls may become
hypersensitive to vascular distension, thus
accounting for the fact that many anti-migraine
drugs are vasoconstrictors.
19Migraine
- Pharmacologic management
- Acute attack
- analgesics (e.g., NSAIDs, APAP)
- triptans (5-HT agonists)
- Prophylaxis
- ß blockers
- anticonvulsants
- Ca2 channel blockers
- etc.
20Neuropathic Pain
- Common types
- diabetic neuropathy
- post-herpetic neuralgia
- phantom limb
- etc.
- Pharmacologic management
- opioids
- tramadol
- topical anesthetics
- antidepressants
- anticonvulsants
21Possible Mechanisms
- Central sensitization. Overactivity of a 2o
neuron in the dorsal horn leads to enhanced pain
transmission characterized by a lowered threshold
for activation and expanded receptive fields,
leading to the activation of key excitatory amino
acid receptors such as the N-methyl-D-aspartate
(NMDA) receptor. - Disinhibition. Reduced activation of central
inhibitory inputs from endogenous opioid, 5-HT,
and norepinephrine pathways. - Sympathetic activation. Sympathetic nerve
endings sprout from a nearby blood vessel toward
the site of injury and can enhance signal
transmission in the DRG. Catecholamine release
and up-regulation of adrenoceptors on free nerve
endings also contribute to sympathetically
mediated pain. - Peripheral sensitization. Injury to peripheral
nerves may lead to hyperexcitability of
peripheral nerve terminals (nociceptors). This
may be due to altered expression of Na channels,
Ca2 channels, or adrenoceptors in peripheral
nerves and DRG.
22Mechanisms of Pain
Normosensitivity
23Mechanisms of Pain
Central Sensitization
24Mechanisms of Pain
Neuropathic
25Mechanisms of Pain
Hyperalgesia
26Mechanisms of Pain
Allodynia
27Combination Analgesics
Possible rationales
- No single perfect analgesic
- Complementary PK
- Multiple sites/mechanisms of action target
multiple pain pathways - Potentially synergistic analgesia
- Comparable efficacy, but reduced AE profile
Raffa, RB. J Clin Pharm Ther. 200126257-64.
28REVIEW QUESTION
- Triptans are most associated with
- Diabetic neuropathy
- Migraine headache
- Neuropathic pain
29REVIEW QUESTION
- Central sensitization and up-regulation are the
same thing - True
- False
30REVIEW QUESTION
- Almost everyone experiences
- Hyperalgesia
- Allodynia
31end