Clinical meaning
Pain is a complex sensory and emotional experience involving multiple neural pathways.
Nociception involves four steps: 1. Transduction: Noxious stimuli (thermal, mechanical, chemical) activate nociceptors (free nerve endings) in peripheral tissues, converting the stimulus into electrical signals. Inflammatory mediators (prostaglandins, bradykinin, substance P, histamine) lower the pain threshold (sensitization). 2. Transmission: Signals travel via A-delta fibers (fast, sharp, well-localized pain) and C fibers (slow, dull, diffuse, aching pain) to the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, then ascend via the spinothalamic tract to the thalamus and somatosensory cortex. 3. Perception: The brain interprets the signal as pain. This is where pain becomes a CONSCIOUS experience. Influenced by attention, emotion, past experience, and cultural factors. 4. Modulation: Descending pathways from the brainstem release endorphins, enkephalins, serotonin, and norepinephrine that can inhibit or amplify pain signals (gate control theory).
Pain is always subjective: the patient's self-report is the single most reliable indicator of pain. Pain is whatever the patient says it is, occurring whenever they say it does (Margo McCaffery).