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Author Question: A patient tells the nurse that he has had deep, burning muscle pain for most of his adult life. What ... (Read 99 times)

stock

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A patient tells the nurse that he has had deep, burning muscle pain for most of his adult life. What does this information tell the nurse about how the patient's pain is being transmitted in the body?
 
  1. C fibers
  2. A-delta fibers
  3. endorphins
  4. dynorphins

Question 2

The nurse is using the neuromatrix theory when determining a patient's pain. What should the nurse consider when assessing a patient's pain?
 
  1. cultural and genetic factors
  2. specificity
  3. pattern
  4. previous sensitization



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milbourne11

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Answer to Question 1

Correct Answer: 1
The pain from deep body structures, such as muscles and viscera, is primarily transmitted by C fibers, producing diffuse burning or aching sensations. A-delta fibers are myelinated and transmit impulses rapidly. They produce what is called fast pain or first pain, which is sharp, well-defined pain typically accompanying cuts, electric shocks, or the impact of a blow. Endorphins and dynorphins are endogenous opioids that block the transmission of painful impulses.

Answer to Question 2

Correct Answer: 1
The neuromatrix theory of pain integrates cultural and genetic factors with basic neurophysiological function. According to this theory, the brain contains a body-self neuromatrix, a widely distributed network of neurons that are affected by both genetic factors and sensory experiences. The neuromatrix integrates multiple sources of input in addition to the stimuli of pain and touch. Other sensory systems that help interpret the input, such as attention, expectation, personality, and culture, innate pain modulation systems, and components of stress-regulation systems, all contribute to the pain experience for the individual. Specificity and pattern theories describe nerve impulses of varying intensity terminating in pain centers in the forebrain. According to the pain sensitization theory, painful signals create a cascade of changes in the nervous system, which increases the responsiveness of the peripheral and central neurons. These changes increase the response to future signals and amplify pain.




stock

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Reply 2 on: Jun 25, 2018
Great answer, keep it coming :)


Joy Chen

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Reply 3 on: Yesterday
Wow, this really help

 

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