Mechanism of pain
Authors/Creators
Description
Word "pain" derives its origin from the Indo-European root aleg meaning to suffer. Word "pain" is later and comes from
the Latin word "poena" meaning punishment. Since ancient times there has been disagreement regarding the perception
of pain and its evaluation. Unlike sight, hearing and smell, pain does not seem to be a primary sensation, but rather an
emotional experience. Most pain researchers view pain as a complex perception, induced by noxious stimuli. Although
pain is the most frequent symptom in medicine and despite the enormous advances that have been made in the field of
analgesia and anesthesia, the pathophysiological mechanisms involved in its generation and maintenance are not fully
understood. Definition of pain was given in 1979 by the classification committee of the international association for the
study of pain (IASP) "as an unpleasant aesthetic and emotional experience, associated with actual or potential tissue
damage or described in terms of such damage". In other words, although physiology and anatomy determine a precise
point of reference for the detection and transmission of messages interpreted as painful, what differentiates the
experience of pain is the fact that there is always an emotional gradient to the experience of pain. The purpose of the
review is to investigate the analgesic system. Pain signals can be blocked at their initial point of entry into the spinal
cord. Analgesia system may also inhibit pain transmission elsewhere in the nociceptive pathway. Because most drugs
that alter neuronal excitability act on synaptic receptors, it has been suggested that the "morphine receptors" of the
analgesia system must actually be receptors for some morphine-like neurotransmitter that is secreted normally from
the brain.
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WJBPR-2022-0047.pdf
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- Repository URL
- https://doi.org/10.53346/wjbpr.2023.4.1.0047