Placebo effects on human μ-opioid activity during pain
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] The Journal of Comparative Neurology , 1899, The American Naturalist.
[2] F. J. Evans,et al. The Nature of Hypnotic Analgesia and Placebo Response to Experimental Pain , 1969, Psychosomatic medicine.
[3] Clark Wc. Sensory-decision theory analysis of the placebo effect on the criterion for pain and thermal sensitivity. , 1969 .
[4] J. R Gibbs,et al. TREATMENT OF EXCESSIVE AXILLARY SWEATING , 1974 .
[5] H. Fields,et al. THE MECHANISM OF PLACEBO ANALGESIA , 1978, The Lancet.
[6] H. Fields,et al. Role of pain in placebo analgesia. , 1979, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[7] F. Bloom,et al. Stimulation of human periaqueductal gray for pain relief increases immunoreactive beta-endorphin in ventricular fluid. , 1979, Science.
[8] J. H. Steiger. Tests for comparing elements of a correlation matrix. , 1980 .
[9] H. Fields,et al. Biology of placebo analgesia. , 1981, The American journal of medicine.
[10] R. Dubner,et al. Placebo and naloxone can alter post-surgical pain by separate mechanisms , 1983, Nature.
[11] Y. Hosobuchi. Combined electrical stimulation of the periaqueductal gray matter and sensory thalamus. , 1983, Applied neurophysiology.
[12] G. Schwartz,et al. Placebo Theory, Research , and Mechanisms , 1985 .
[13] Young Rf,et al. Pain relief by electrical stimulation of the periaqueductal and periventricular gray matter. Evidence for a non-opioid mechanism. , 1987 .
[14] N. Barbaro. Studies of PAG/PVG stimulation for pain relief in humans. , 1988, Progress in brain research.
[15] N. Voudouris,et al. Conditioned response models of placebo phenomena: further support , 1989, Pain.
[16] D. Nichols,et al. Stimulation-produced analgesia and its cross-tolerance between dorsal and ventral PAG loci , 1990, Pain.
[17] M. Gold,et al. Periaqueductal gray stimulation produces a spinally mediated, opioid antinociception for the inflamed hindpaw of the rat , 1991, Brain Research.
[18] Rainer Spanagel,et al. Opposing tonically active endogenous opioid systems modulate the mesolimbic dopaminergic pathway , 1992 .
[19] R. Wise,et al. Differential involvement of ventral tegmental mu, delta and kappa opioid receptors in modulation of basal mesolimbic dopamine release: in vivo microdialysis studies. , 1993, The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics.
[20] M. Behbehani. Functional characteristics of the midbrain periaqueductal gray , 1995, Progress in Neurobiology.
[21] H. Duvernoy. The Human Brain Stem and Cerebellum , 1995, Springer Vienna.
[22] N. Volkow,et al. Distribution Volume Ratios without Blood Sampling from Graphical Analysis of PET Data , 1996, Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism.
[23] President Jiang Zemin on family planning and environmental protection. , 1997, China population today.
[24] Hong Jia,et al. Inhibitory effects of electrically evoked activation of ventrolateral orbital cortex on the tail-flick reflex are mediated by periaqueductal gray in rats , 1997, PAIN.
[25] Hong Jia,et al. Involvement of the frontal ventrolateral orbital cortex in descending inhibition of nociception mediated by the periaqueductal gray in rats , 1997, Neuroscience Letters.
[26] W. Willis,et al. Neuroanatomy of the pain system and of the pathways that modulate pain. , 1997, Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society.
[27] Hong Jia,et al. Inhibitory effects of electrical stimulation of ventrolateral orbital cortex on the rat jaw-opening reflex , 1998, Brain Research.
[28] H. Duvernoy,et al. The Human Brain: Surface, Three-Dimensional Sectional Anatomy with MRI, and Blood Supply , 1999 .
[29] F. Benedetti,et al. Neuropharmacological Dissection of Placebo Analgesia: Expectation-Activated Opioid Systems versus Conditioning-Activated Specific Subsystems , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[30] D. Price,et al. An analysis of factors that contribute to the magnitude of placebo analgesia in an experimental paradigm , 1999, PAIN.
[31] F. Benedetti,et al. Inducing placebo respiratory depressant responses in humans via opioid receptors , 1999, The European journal of neuroscience.
[32] F. Benedetti,et al. Somatotopic Activation of Opioid Systems by Target-Directed Expectations of Analgesia , 1999, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[33] Joshua A. Bueller,et al. Regional Mu Opioid Receptor Regulation of Sensory and Affective Dimensions of Pain , 2001, Science.
[34] M. Preul. The Human Brain: Surface, Blood Supply, and Three-Dimensional Sectional Anatomy , 2001 .
[35] Vilfredo De Pascalis,et al. The contribution of suggestibility and expectation to placebo analgesia phenomenon in an experimental setting , 2002, Pain.
[36] Thomas E. Nichols,et al. Thresholding of Statistical Maps in Functional Neuroimaging Using the False Discovery Rate , 2002, NeuroImage.
[37] W. A. Prado,et al. Microinjection of renin–angiotensin system peptides in discrete sites within the rat periaqueductal gray matter elicits antinociception , 2003, Brain Research.
[38] D. Price,et al. The contributions of suggestion, desire, and expectation to placebo effects in irritable bowel syndrome patients An empirical investigation , 2003, Pain.
[39] S. Minoshima,et al. Keeping pain out of mind: the role of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in pain modulation. , 2003, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[40] M. Bushnell,et al. Analgesic and placebo effects of thalamic stimulation , 2003, Pain.
[41] Joshua A. Bueller,et al. COMT val158met Genotype Affects µ-Opioid Neurotransmitter Responses to a Pain Stressor , 2003, Science.
[42] C. Phillips,et al. I ncreased cerebral functional connectivity underlying the antinociceptive effects of hypnosis , 2003 .
[43] F. Benedetti,et al. Placebo analgesia and the heart , 2003, Pain.
[44] Edward E. Smith,et al. Placebo-Induced Changes in fMRI in the Anticipation and Experience of Pain , 2004, Science.
[45] Long-chuan Yu,et al. Substance P microinjected into the periaqueductal gray matter induces antinociception and is released following morphine administration , 2004, Brain Research.
[46] Till Sprenger,et al. Distraction modulates connectivity of the cingulo-frontal cortex and the midbrain during pain—an fMRI analysis , 2004, Pain.
[47] H. Fields. State-dependent opioid control of pain , 2004, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[48] Peter Dayan,et al. Temporal difference models describe higher-order learning in humans , 2004, Nature.
[49] J. Zubieta,et al. Neurobiological Mechanisms of the Placebo Effect , 2005, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[50] R. Treede,et al. Human brain mechanisms of pain perception and regulation in health and disease , 2005, European journal of pain.
[51] Matthew C. Keller,et al. Increased sensitivity in neuroimaging analyses using robust regression , 2005, NeuroImage.
[52] Thomas E. Nichols,et al. Placebo Effects Mediated by Endogenous Opioid Activity on μ-Opioid Receptors , 2005, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[53] Donald D. Price,et al. Increased placebo analgesia over time in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients is associated with desire and expectation but not endogenous opioid mechanisms , 2005, Pain.
[54] J. Brooks,et al. A role for the brainstem in central sensitisation in humans. Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging , 2005, Pain.
[55] Howard L Fields,et al. Isolating the Modulatory Effect of Expectation on Pain Transmission: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study , 2006, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[56] C. Büchel,et al. Mechanisms of placebo analgesia: rACC recruitment of a subcortical antinociceptive network , 2006, Pain.
[57] Tor D. Wager,et al. Placebo effects in laser-evoked pain potentials , 2006, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity.
[58] Stein Knardahl,et al. Placebo-Induced Changes in Spinal Cord Pain Processing , 2006, The Journal of Neuroscience.