Pain Scales
Types of Pain
Classification of Pain
Pain Assessment
Pharmacologic Pain Meds
100

Scale uses words to help the individual describe pain intensity 

What is the Verbal Descriptor Pain
Scale?

100

These chemical substances are released as apart of nociceptive pain

What are prostaglandins (increase sensitivity of pain receptors) and endorphins/enkephalins? (suppress pain reception)

100

Pain associated with a nonnoxious stimuli or nerve route injury may cause this

What is allodynia?

100

The standard used for measuring the existence and intensity of pain

What is "the patient self report"?

100

The preferred routes least expensive, best tolerated and easiest to administer

What is the oral route of pain medication administration?

200

This scale consists of cartoon faces that the patient selects to report their pain

What is the Wong-Baker Faces Scale?

200

The four processes involved in nociception

What are Transduction, Transmission, Perception, and Modulation?

200

Nerves in the spinal cord are hyperexcitable which result in pain

What is the central pain mechanism?

200

What information describes how the patient perceives pain?

What is Culture; Past pain experiences, medical history, lab tests, diagnostic tests?

200

Preventing pain and maintaining a pain intensity allowing the patient to accomplish a functional goal or quality of life goal

What are the principles of effective pain management?

300

A 10 cm line that represents no pain to worst pain on the opposite sides of the line. The individual places a mark Somewhere between the two ends of the line to represent their pain severity

What is the visual analog scale?

300

The brain influences the way pain is perceived

What is perception?

300

Hyperexcitable nerve endings in the periphery become damaged leading to an abnormal reorganization of the nervous system is known as what?

What is neuroplasticity?

300

Pain management begins with

What is a systematic assessment?

300

Results in hepatotoxicity and should not exceep 4,000 mg/day

What is acetaminophen?

400

When you assessing the patient and use a reliable and valid measurement tool

What is pain intensity?

400

The conversion of one energy form to another starting at the periphery when a noxious stimulus causes tissue damage

What is transduction?

400

Dysfunctional pain that occurs without tissue damage and inflammation; nerve endings become damaged

What is neuropathic pain?

400

Every new report of pain and before/after administering analgesic agents

What is pain reassessment?

400

Many result in gastric ulcers or contribute to MI or stroke

What are non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs?

500

rating scale ranges form 0-10 with 0 indicating no  pain

What is the numeric rating scale?

500

Pathophysiological pain

What is Neuropathic pain?

500

The neural processing of noxious stimuli

What is nociception?

500

Location, intensity, quality, onset, duration, aggravating and relieving factors, effect of pain on quality and function of life, comfort-function goal

What is a comprehensive pain assessment?

500

first line medication with no ceiling effect

What are Mu Agonist opioids? (Morphine, hydromorphone, hydrocodone, fentanyl, oxycodone, methadone)