Results 251 to 260 of about 91,179 (287)
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The Pharmacology of Visceral Pain
2016Visceral pain describes pain emanating from the internal thoracic, pelvic, or abdominal organs. Unlike somatic pain, visceral pain is generally vague, poorly localized, and characterized by hypersensitivity to a stimulus such as organ distension. While current therapeutics provides some relief from somatic pain, drugs used for treatment of chronic ...
Anthony C, Johnson +1 more
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Schmerz (Berlin, Germany), 2017
Chronic visceral pain is an unresolved neurobiological, medical and socioeconomic challenge. Up to 20% of the adult population suffer from chronic visceral pain and abdominal complaints constitute a prevalent symptom also in children and adolescents.
S, Elsenbruch, W, Häuser, W, Jänig
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Chronic visceral pain is an unresolved neurobiological, medical and socioeconomic challenge. Up to 20% of the adult population suffer from chronic visceral pain and abdominal complaints constitute a prevalent symptom also in children and adolescents.
S, Elsenbruch, W, Häuser, W, Jänig
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New England Journal of Medicine, 1952
ALTHOUGH our Puritan ancestors may have thought that pain was a scourge of God to try the soul of man, few modern philosophers would agree with this concept.
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ALTHOUGH our Puritan ancestors may have thought that pain was a scourge of God to try the soul of man, few modern philosophers would agree with this concept.
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2009
1. Epidemiology and social impact of visceral pain 2. Visceral pain phenomena in the clinical setting and their interpretation 3. Experimental visceral pain 4. Animal models of visceral pain 5. Mechanisms: lessons from translational studies of endometriosis 6. Emerging pharmacological therapies 7. Cardiac vs. non-cardiac chest pain 8.
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1. Epidemiology and social impact of visceral pain 2. Visceral pain phenomena in the clinical setting and their interpretation 3. Experimental visceral pain 4. Animal models of visceral pain 5. Mechanisms: lessons from translational studies of endometriosis 6. Emerging pharmacological therapies 7. Cardiac vs. non-cardiac chest pain 8.
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2000
Pain has traditionally been considered a primary sensory modality. Although pain mediates responses to injury of all bodily tissues, the vast majority of pain research has focused upon cutaneous sensation, the most superficial of the body components and the most experimentally accessible.
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Pain has traditionally been considered a primary sensory modality. Although pain mediates responses to injury of all bodily tissues, the vast majority of pain research has focused upon cutaneous sensation, the most superficial of the body components and the most experimentally accessible.
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Visceral Pain and Visceral Hyperalgesia
1998It is widely appreciated that visceral pain differs in several impor tant ways from more commonly experienced and better understood pain arising from cutaneous structures. Visceral pain is diffuse in nature, poorly localized and typically referred to cutaneous and/or other somatic structures.
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