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Title: Translational Pain Research
Sub-title: Volume 1 - Current Status & New Trends
Edited by: Jianren Mao
ISBN10-13: 1600212069 : 9781600212062
Illustrations: tables & charts
Format: Hardback
Size: 180x260mm
Pages: 476
Weight: 1.192 Kg.
Published: Nova Science Publishers, Inc (US) - June   2006
List Price: 132.99 Pounds Sterling
Availability: Temporarily Out of Stock, more expected soon 
Subjects: Medical research : Pain & pain management
Basic science and clinical pain research is particularly challenging for several reasons. First, pain is a subjective experience in response to nociception that follows actual or potential tissue damage. Since the ability to respond to this warning signal is essential for our survival, the nociceptive system that produces and transmits nociceptive signals is remarkably redundant and involves diffuse regions of the central nervous system. Second, unlike other sensory modalities, pain is a multi-dimensional experience including at least cognitive, affective, and sensory-discriminative components. Third, pain experiences can be influenced by psychological, socioeconomic, cultural, and genetic predispositions, making it exceedingly complicated to study pain and pain modulation. In this first volume, the current status and new trends of pain research are selectively discussed in order to take a critical and constructive look at the achievements of basic science research that have made significant differences in clinical pain management as well as the gaps between basic science research and clinical pain management.
Table of Contents:
Preface; Theories of Pain; Spinal Cord Mechanisms of Pain and their Modulation; Long-Lasting Sensory Potentiation: A Synaptic Model for Central Pain; Molecular Pain and Pain Management; A Dual-System Integration Model of Pain Mechanisms: Implications for Clinical Pain; Animal 'Pain' Models and Behavioural Tests in Pre-clinical Studies; Pain Assessment Tools used in Clinical Pain Management: Implications for Translational Research; Experimental Pain Testing: Measurement and Clinical Relevance; In Silico Genetic Analysis of Pain and Analgesia Related Traits; Sex Differences in Pain: Translational Challenges and Opportunities; Placebo Effects and Meaning Response: Perspectives from Consciousness Studies; Preclinical Studies of Intrathecal Analgesics; Intrathecal Drug Delivery for Chronic Pain Management; Spinal Cord Stimulation: Mechanisms and Clinical Application; Drug Delivery Methods; Index.
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