• Annals of medicine · Apr 1995

    Review

    Peripheral acute pain mechanisms.

    • R D Treede.
    • Institute of Physiology and Pathophysiology, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany.
    • Ann. Med. 1995 Apr 1; 27 (2): 213-6.

    AbstractMany studies in several species, including humans, have identified a subset of primary afferent nerve fibres that are activated by potential or actual tissue-damaging stimuli. Discharge patterns of these nociceptive afferents faithfully reproduce some aspects of the applied stimuli (e.g. shape of the stimulus-response function) but not others (e.g. time-course of a sustained stimulus). Since primary nociceptive afferents provide the input to the central nervous system, their encoding properties have to be considered when studying central processing. On the other hand, pain perception correlates with some aspects of nociceptor discharges (e.g. fatigue with repetition of brief heat pulses), but not with others (e.g. absolute thresholds). Therefore, the painfulness of a stimulus cannot be deduced from nociceptor discharges alone; central processing needs to be taken into account, particularly central summation. In addition to the immediate responses of nociceptive afferents to external stimulation, acute pain mechanisms also comprise the short-term plasticity of the nociceptive system as a consequence of prolonged noxious stimulation.

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