PMCOL 343 Final Exam Questions With Correct Answers
5 views 0 purchase
Course
PMCOL 343
Institution
PMCOL 343
PMCOL 343 Final Exam Questions With
Correct Answers
A-beta fibers - answer- respond to gentle mechanical stimuli
A-delta fibers - answer- respond to noxious mechanical stimuli
- fast conduction
C fibers - answer- respond to noxious heat or chemical stimuli
- slowly conducting
What is nocicep...
PMCOL 343 Final Exam Questions With
Correct Answers
A-beta fibers - answer✔- respond to gentle mechanical stimuli
A-delta fibers - answer✔- respond to noxious mechanical stimuli
- fast conduction
C fibers - answer✔- respond to noxious heat or chemical stimuli
- slowly conducting
What is nociception? - answer✔- neural encoding of noxious stimuli
What is pain? - answer✔- unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual
or potential tissue damage
Analgesic Definition - answer✔- blocks the sensation of pain without blocking other modalities
What is the difference between local and general anaesthetics? - answer✔- local anaesthetics
block nerve conduction and all sensation
- general anaesthetics cause unconsciousness, do not always produce analgesia
What is hyperalgesia? - answer✔- enhanced response to painful stimulus
What is allodynia? - answer✔- generation of a painful response by an innocuous stimuli
What is acute pain/first pain? - answer✔- nociceptive stimuli leads to acute pain via activation
of nociceptive pathways
- A-delta fibers
- good pain
- if causes inflammation then it is carried by C-fibers (chronic pain)
- treated with/prevented by local anaesthetics
- less than 3 months
What is deep pain? - answer✔- deep to body surface, poorly localized associated with major
trauma
- treated by major analgesics (opioids)
- good pain
What is neuropathic pain? - answer✔- pain induced by injury to the somatosensory system
- nerve injury or NS infections
- ex: phantom limb pain, shingles, diabetic neuropathy
- develops slowly and OUTLASTS healing of original injury
- not good pain??
What occurs if peripheral nerve injury pain is left untreated? - answer✔- leads to centralization
of pain
--> pain becomes chronic and hard to treat
What are the structural requirements of local anaesthetics? - answer✔- aromatic residue
- ester/amide linkage to alkylamino group
- weak bases
What are examples of local anaesthetics with ester linkages? How are they hydrolyzed? -
answer✔- cocaine
- procaine
--> hydrolyzed by plasma cholinesterase
--> half life in blood of less than one minute
What is the mechanism of action of local anaesthetics? - answer✔- block Na+ channels
(increased threshold for AP firing)
- must become neutral to enter membrane
- enters channel from inside
- use-dependent block (higher probability of blocking if more active)
How does pH influence local anaesthetic efficacy? - answer✔- low pH (high H) pushes the
reaction towards the cationic form which can't enter the membrane to block Na+ channels
How does pKa of a local anaesthetic influence its own efficacy? What are some examples? -
answer✔- smaller pKa has a faster rate of onset because more uncharged molecules are "ready
to go" and pass through membrane to block Na+ channels
- Mepivacaine has a faster rate of onset than Procaine because it has a smaller pKa
When administered local anaesthetics, vasoconstrictors like adrenaline are often added. What is
the purpose of this? - answer✔- limit systemic absorption (especially if applied to highly
vascularized area)
- increase local anaesthetic concentration at site of action
- counteract tendency for local anaesthetics to cause vasodilation
What are some factors that affect nerve fiber susceptibility for local anaesthetics? - answer✔1.
fibre diameter
- C- A-delta fibers most susceptible
- lowest safety factor for conduction
2. firing frequency (fire more = more susceptible)
3. spike width (broad spikes = more chances for entry)
How can systemic absorption of local anaesthetics lead to toxicity? - answer✔- hypotension
(direct effects on smc in b.vessel)
- cardiac depression (Na+ block in heart) esp with bupivacaine
What are the CNS effects of local anaesthetics? - answer✔- sleepiness, light-headedness,
auditory disturbances, restlessness
What are the characteristics of general anaesthesia? - answer✔- analgesia
- amnesia
- loss of consciousness
- inhibition of sensory and autonomic reflexes
- skeletal muscle relaxation
What are the characteristics of an ideal general anaesthetic agent? - answer✔- smooth and rapid
induction
- rapid recovery
- wide margin of safety
- limited adverse effects
What are some of the adverse effects of general anaesthetics? - answer✔- vomiting
- CV depression
- respiratory depression
- respiratory irritant effect of volatile (gas) anaesthetics
- toxicity
What types of anaesthetics are used for minor procedures? - answer✔- oral sedatives + regional
local anaesthesia
What types of anaesthetics are used for conscious sedation? - answer✔- benzodiazepines +
opioid analgesics
- can respond to verbal commands, patent airway
What are the preoperative medications? - answer✔- sedatives that have anxiolytic and amnesia
properties
- muscle relaxants (d-tubocurarine)
- atropine (to limit mucous secretions)
What is used to induce anaesthesia? - answer✔- via IV
- thiopental
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller Brightstars. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $10.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.