Spinal Neuropeptide Responses in Persistent and Transient Pain Following Cervical Nerve Root Injury
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
- 2005-11-15
著者
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Winkelstein Beth
Department Of Bioengineering University Of Pennsylvania
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Rothman Sarah
Department Of Bioengineering University Of Pennsylvania
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KREIDER Rob
Department of Bioengineering, University of Pennsylvania
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Kreider Rob
Department Of Bioengineering University Of Pennsylvania
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WINKELSTEIN Beth
Department of Anesthesiology and Pharmacology, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center
関連論文
- Repeated Injury to the Lumbar Nerve Roots Produces Enhanced Mechanical Allodynia and Persistent Spinal Neuroinflammation
- Physiology of Chronic Spinal Pain Syndromes : From Animal Models to Biomechanics
- The Cervical Facet Capsule and Its Role in Whiplash Injury : A Biomechanical Investigation
- CT Imaging Techniques for Describing Motions of the Cervicothoracic Junction and Cervical Spine During Flexion, Extension, and Cervical Traction
- Head-Turned Postures Increase the Risk of Cervical Facet Capsule Injury During Whiplash
- Lumbar Nerve Root Injury Induces Central Nervous System Neuroimmune Activation and Neuroinflammation in the Rat : Relationship to Painful Radiculopathy
- An Intact Facet Capsular Ligament Modulates Behavioral Sensitivity and Spinal Glial Activation Produced by Cervical Facet Joint Tension
- Mechanical Evidence of Cervical Facet Capsule Injury During Whiplash : A Cadaveric Study Using Combined Shear, Compression, and Extension Loading
- Inflammatory Cytokine and Chemokine Expression Is Differentially Modulated Acutely in the Dorsal Root Ganglion in Response to Different Nerve Root Compressions
- Spinal Neuropeptide Responses in Persistent and Transient Pain Following Cervical Nerve Root Injury
- The Role of Mechanical Deformation in Lumbar Radiculopathy : An In Vivo Model
- Transient Cervical Nerve Root Compression in the Rat Induces Bilateral Forepaw Allodynia and Spinal Glial Activation : Mechanical Factors in Painful Neck Injuries
- Pressure Measurement in the Cervical Spinal Facet Joint : Considerations for Maintaining Joint Anatomy and an Intact Capsule
- The Role of Tissue Damage in Whiplash-Associated Disorders
- How Can Animal Models Inform on the Transition to Chronic Symptoms in Whiplash?