Topics in Anaesthesia and Critical Care H.K.F. VAN SAENE, 1. SILVESTRI, M.A. DE LA CAL (EDs) Infection Control in the Intensive Care Unit 1998,380 pp, ISBN 3-540-75043-6 J. MILIC-EMILI (ED) Applied Physiology in Respiratory Mechanics 1998,246 pp,ISBN 3-540-75041-X G. GUARNIERI, F. ISCRA (EDs) Metabolism and Artificial Nutrition in the Critically III 1999,130 pp, ISBN 88-470-0042-4 J. MILIC -EMILI, U. LUCANGELO, A. PESENTI, W.A. ZIN (EDS) Basics of Respiratory Mechanism and Artificial Ventilation 1999,268 pp,lSBN 88-470-0046-7 M. TIENGO, V.A. PALADIN I, N. RAWAL (EDs) Regional Anaesthesia, Analgesia and Pain Management 1999,362 pp, ISBN 88-470-0044-0 1. SALVO, D. VlLlYASAGAR (EDs) Anaesthesia and Intensive Care in Neonates and Children 1999,324 pp, ISBN 88-470-0043-2 G. BERLOT, H. DELOOZ, A. GULLO (EDs) Trauma Operative Procedures 1999,210 pp, ISBN 88-470-0045-9 G.L. ArlEE, J.-L. VINCEKT (EDS) Critical Care Cardiology in the Perioperative Period 2000,214 pp, ISBN 88-470-0133-1 M.A. TIENGO (ED) Neuroscience: Focus on Acute and Chronic Pain 2000,214 pp, ISBN 88-470-0134-X Anestesia e Medicina Critica G. SLAVICH (ED) Elettrocardiografia Clinica 1997,328 pp, ISBN 3-540-75050-9 G.L. AlATI, B. ALLARIA, G. BERLOT, A. GULLO, A. LUZZANI, G. MARTINELLI, 1. TORELLI (EDS) Anestesia e Malattie Concomitanti -Fisiopatologia e clinica del periodo perioperatorio 1997,382 pp, [SBN 3-540-75048-7 B. AlLARIA, M.V. BALDASSARE, A. GULLO, A. LUZZANI, G. MANANI, G. MARTINELLI, A. PASETTO, 1. TORELLI (EDs) Farmacologia Generale e Speciale in Anestesiologia Clinica 1997,312 pp, ISBN 88-470-0001-7 A. GULLO (ED) Anestesia Clinica 1998,506 pp, ISBN 88-470-0038-6 A. GULLO, 1. GATTINONI Medicina Intensiva e Perioperatoria 2000,863 pp, ISBN 88-470-0135-8 Neuroscience: Focus on Acute and Chronic Pain Springer Milano Berlin Heidelberg New York Barcelona Hong Kong London Paris Singapore Tokyo M.A. Tiengo (Ed) Neuroscience: Focus on Acute and Chronic Pain Series edited by Antonino Gullo Springer M.A. TIENGO, MD Professor Emeritus of Physiopathology and Pain Therapy State University of Milan, Italy Series Topics in Anaesthesia and Critical Care edited by A.GULLO,MD Department of Clinical Science - Section of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Clinic University of Trieste, Cattinara Hospital, Trieste, Italy Springer-Verlag Italia a member of BertelsmannSpringer Science+Business Media GmbH © Springer-Verlag Italia, Milano 2001 ISBN-13: 978-88-470-0134-3 e-ISBN-13: 978-88-470-2258-4 DOl: 10.1007/978-88-470-2258-4 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: Applied for This work is subject to copyright. 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In every individual case the user must check such information by consulting the relevant literature. Cover design: Simona Colombo Typesetting and layout: Photo Life, Milan SPIN: 10790136 Preface Probably no field of medicine has contributed as much to the understanding of neuroscience as has the study of pain. This has been apparent since the publica tion of the first texts on pain, of which I cite only two of the most important. The first text dates to 1914. Anoci-association by G.W. Crile and W.E. Lower was ded icated to the shock caused by surgical intervention; the authors described how the deleterious effects of this form of shock could be reduced by protecting the individual from pain through a series of analgesic medicines. The second text is a classic surely known to everybody. It appeared many years later, towards the end of the first half of the 1900s. Pain Mechanisms was written by W.K. Livingston, a medical officer of the US Marines Reserve. Upon its publi cation in 1943, the publishing house Macmillan commented: "The tremendous complexity of the problems related to pain and all sensory perceptions adds to the difficulty of interpreting clinical observations, but at the same time adds to its fascinations. Though physiological laboratories have made contributions of fundamental importance [to the future of clinical medicine], '" the study of the Central Nervous System [is] still a long way from the point at which [our knowl edge] can be used to explain such clinical states as causalgia or phantom limb pain:' Those who read that stupendous book certainly remember that the clini cal section was preceded by one dealing with basic issues in four chapters: (1) the anatomy of pain, (2) the cutaneous receptor and the concept of specificity, (3) the physiology of pain, and (4) the psychology of pain. In a masterly way, this book laid the foundation for the study of pain, and it is still valid today. In its bibliog raphy, the book cited the great neurophysiologists Adrian (professor of physiol ogy at Cambridge) and Sherrington (professor of physiology at Oxford), both Nobel Prize recipients, and many other neuroanatomists, neurophysiologists and psychologists who made fundamental contributions to the study of pain. When Professor Antonino Gullo, my great friend and sedulous mentor of APICE, proposed that I coordinate the session "Neuroscience: focus on acute and chronic pain", I was more than honored: I was profoundly pleased. This volume contains the presentations made in that session. The reader has only to browse the table of contents to realize that the arguments discussed in this volume deal with salient points which connect neuroscience with the clinical approaches to acute and chronic pain syndromes. One also immediately notices that the individual chapters have been written by scientists who are protagonists in these fields. Some readers may not agree that issues related to the treatment of terminally ill patients and to the ethics of such care are relevant in a neuroscience text. Let VI Preface us not forget that the study of the conscience occupies a central position in neu roscience today, and that it involves two "vertices of observation:' to borrow an expression from Mauro Mancia. There is the neurobiological vertex that consid ers the basic conscience, or rather those functions such as wakefulness, attention, perception, and memory. Associated with this consciousness is a psychological and psychodynamic vertex, which encompasses the consciousness of superior order and the consciousness of self in particular, and that also expresses values of ethics. My personal contribution to the volume is a commemorative presentation of Camillo Golgi who, at the dawn of neuroscience, with his black reaction, was able to visualize neuronal cells and circuits. This discovery then allowed Ramon y Cajal to trace, for the first time, the neuronal routes of pain and touch with admirable accuracy and precision. I wish to thank all my colleagues who accepted the invitation to participate in the compilation of this volume and who each offered a masterful scientific con tribution. I also thank Springer-Verlag for assuming this great editorial responsi bility. Milan, November 2000 M.A. Tiengo Honorary Member of International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) Contents Chapter 1 -Camillo Golgi: The Dawning of Neuroscience M.A. Tiengo .......................................................................................................... . Chapter 2 -Neurochemistry of Pain Circuits: Physiological versus Pathological Pain L. Calza .................................................................................................................. 9 Chapter 3 -First Affluent Neuron G. Carli................................................................................................................... 19 Chapter 4 -The Involvement of the Brainstem Reticular Formation in Pain Processing C. Desbois, L. Monconduit, L. Villanueva .......................................................... 27 Chapter 5 -The Thalamus and Pain M.L. Sotgiu ............................................................................................................ 37 Chapter 6 -Naloxone, but not Estradiol, Affects the Gonadectomy-Induced Increase in Hippocampal Cholineacetyltransferase Activity in Male Rats I. Ceccarelli, A. Scaramuzzino, A.M. Aloisi ........................................................ 43 Chapter 7 -Consciousness and Pain C.R. Chapman, Y. Nakamura............................................................................... 51 Chapter 8 -Visceral Pain Mechanisms M.A. Giamberardino, J. Vecchiet, G. Affaitati, L. Vecchiet................................ 59 Chapter 9 -PET-Scan and Electrophysiological Assessment of Neuromodulation Procedures for Pain Control L. Garda-Larrea, R. Peyron, F. Mauguiere, B. Laurent ..................................... 71 Chapter 10 -Acute Postoperative Pain Service Models G. Galimberti, P. Di Marco, A. Conti................................................................... 87 VIII Contents Chapter 11 -Postoperative Functional Pain Management F. Nicosia ............................................................................................................... 99 Chapter 12 -Timing for Narcotic Drugs in Terminal Illness S. Mercadante........................................................................................................ 105 Chapter 13 -Ethical Decisions in Terminal Illness D. Kettler, M. Mohr ............................................................................................... III Main Symbols ....................................................................................................... 119 Subject Index ........................................................................................................ 121 Contributors Affaitati G. Pathophysiology of Pain Laboratory, Department of Medicine and Science of Aging "G. D' Annunzio", University of Chieti, Italy Aloisi A.M. Institute of Human Physiology, University of Siena, Italy Calza 1. Department of Veterinary Morphophysiology and Animal Production, (DIMORFIPA), University of Bologna, Italy Carli G. Institute of Human Physiology, University of Siena, Italy Ceccarelli I. Institute of Human Physiology, University of Siena, Italy Chapman C.R. Department of Anaesthesiology, University of Washigton, Seattle, USA ContiA. Department of Clinical Science -Section of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Clinic, University of Trieste, Cattinara Hospital, Italy Desbois C. INSERM, U-161, Paris, France DiMarco P. Department of Clinical Science -Section of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Clinic, University of Trieste, Cattinara Hospital, Italy Galimberti G. Department of Clinical Science -Section of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Clinic, University of Trieste, Cattinara Hospital, Italy Garda-Larrea 1. Functional Neurology Unit, UPRES-EA 1880, Claude Bernard University, Lyon, and CERMEP, Lyon, France (affiliated to the Institut Fecieratif de Neurosciences of Lyon)
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