Postural effects of imagined leg pain as a function of hypnotizability
暂无分享,去创建一个
Alexa Huber | Enrica L. Santarcangelo | Giulia Paoletti | Diego Manzoni | G. Carli | G. Paoletti | E. Santarcangelo | D. Manzoni | E. Scattina | Eliana Scattina | Giancarlo Carli | A. Huber | M. Menzocchi | Manuel Menzocchi
[1] M. Woollacott,et al. Attention and the control of posture and gait: a review of an emerging area of research. , 2002, Gait & posture.
[2] J. Liepert,et al. Motor excitability during imagination and observation of foot dorsiflexions , 2009, Journal of Neural Transmission.
[3] R. Stutman,et al. Posttraumatic stress disorder, hypnotizability, and imagery. , 1985, The American journal of psychiatry.
[4] J. Marinus,et al. Thinking about movement hurts: the effect of motor imagery on pain and swelling in people with chronic arm pain. , 2008, Arthritis and rheumatism.
[5] G. Moseley,et al. Graded motor imagery is effective for long-standing complex regional pain syndrome: a randomised controlled trial , 2004, Pain.
[6] V. Andrew Stenger,et al. Cerebral activation during hypnotically induced and imagined pain , 2004, NeuroImage.
[7] Gian Domenico Iannetti,et al. A multisensory investigation of the functional significance of the “pain matrix” , 2011, NeuroImage.
[8] Michel Guerraz,et al. Expectation and the Vestibular Control of Balance , 2005, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[9] G. Paoletti,et al. Cardiovascular and respiratory correlates of deep nociceptive stimulation, suggestions for analgesia, pain imagery and cognitive load as a function of hypnotizability , 2010, Brain Research Bulletin.
[10] A. Macerata,et al. Modulation of the postural effects of cognitive load by hypnotizability , 2009, Experimental Brain Research.
[11] Shu-Chen Li,et al. Dual-tasking postural control: Aging and the effects of cognitive demand in conjunction with focus of attention , 2006, Brain Research Bulletin.
[12] Chantal Berna,et al. Presence of Mental Imagery Associated with Chronic Pelvic Pain: A Pilot Study , 2011, Pain medicine.
[13] R. Treede,et al. Human brain mechanisms of pain perception and regulation in health and disease , 2005, European journal of pain.
[14] N. Šarabon,et al. Effects of vertical center of mass redistribution on body sway parameters during quiet standing. , 2011, Gait & posture.
[15] G. Crombez,et al. The Fear-Avoidance Model of Musculoskeletal Pain: Current State of Scientific Evidence , 2006, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.
[16] Subhobrata Mitra,et al. Methodological and interpretive issues in posture-cognition dual-tasking in upright stance. , 2008, Gait & posture.
[17] Tim Kiemel,et al. Controlling human upright posture: velocity information is more accurate than position or acceleration. , 2004, Journal of neurophysiology.
[18] B. Ghelarducci,et al. Effects of Vestibular and Neck Proprioceptive Stimulation on Posture as a Function of Hypnotizability , 2008, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[19] H. Crawford,et al. Phobias and intense fears: Facilitating their treatment with hypnosis. , 1993 .
[20] W. Häuser,et al. Efficacy of hypnosis/guided imagery in fibromyalgia syndrome - a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled trials , 2011, BMC musculoskeletal disorders.
[21] S. Overeem,et al. Motor imagery of foot dorsiflexion and gait: Effects on corticospinal excitability , 2008, Clinical Neurophysiology.
[22] I. Kirsch,et al. Handbook of Clinical Hypnosis , 1993 .
[23] Paolo Russo,et al. Italian norms for the harvard group scale of hypnotic susceptibility, form a , 2000, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[24] D. Spiegel,et al. Dissociation and hypnotizability in posttraumatic stress disorder. , 1988, The American journal of psychiatry.
[25] Enrica L. Santarcangelo,et al. Imagery of different sensory modalities: hypnotizability and body sway , 2007, Experimental Brain Research.
[26] C. Spielberger,et al. Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory , 1970 .
[27] R. Bryant,et al. Hypnotizability in acute stress disorder. , 2001, The American journal of psychiatry.
[28] Sheng Li. Movement-specific enhancement of corticospinal excitability at subthreshold levels during motor imagery , 2007, Experimental Brain Research.
[29] E. McCarthy,et al. Alternative mind-body therapies used by adults with medical conditions. , 2009, Journal of psychosomatic research.
[30] Herta Flor,et al. Sensorimotor training and cortical reorganization. , 2009, NeuroRehabilitation.
[31] I. Molton,et al. THE EFFICACY OF HYPNOTIC ANALGESIA IN ADULTS: A REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE. , 2009, Contemporary hypnosis : the journal of the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis.
[32] Luke A. Henderson,et al. Brain circuitry underlying pain in response to imagined movement in people with spinal cord injury , 2010, PAIN®.
[33] A Tremblay,et al. Reducing weight increases postural stability in obese and morbid obese men , 2007, International Journal of Obesity.
[34] M. Jeannerod. Neural Simulation of Action: A Unifying Mechanism for Motor Cognition , 2001, NeuroImage.
[35] J. Raymakers,et al. The assessment of body sway and the choice of the stability parameter(s). , 2005, Gait & posture.
[36] P. Orsini,et al. Can imagery become reality? , 2010, Experimental Brain Research.
[37] F. Tremblay,et al. Corticomotor facilitation associated with observation, imagery and imitation of hand actions: a comparative study in young and old adults , 2007, Experimental Brain Research.
[38] Ian Wickramasekera PhD. Assessment and treatment of somatization disorders: The high risk model of threat perception. , 1993 .
[39] S M Kosslyn,et al. Imagery and hypnotizability revisited. , 1998, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[40] R. Reynolds. The effect of voluntary sway control on the early and late components of the vestibular-evoked postural response , 2010, Experimental Brain Research.
[41] A. D. Craig,et al. Human feelings: why are some more aware than others? , 2004, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[42] V. Nougier,et al. Dual-task study of cognitive and postural interference in 7-year-olds and adults , 2007, Neuroreport.
[43] H. Dawes,et al. Mental techniques during manual stretching in spasticity — a pilot randomized controlled trial , 2009, Clinical rehabilitation.
[44] J. Kihlstrom,et al. Hypnotizability and mental imagery. , 1995, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[45] Winfried Rief,et al. Muscular Reactivity and Specificity in Chronic Back Pain Patients , 2008, Psychosomatic medicine.
[46] P. Hodges,et al. Inefficient Muscular Stabilization of the Lumbar Spine Associated With Low Back Pain: A Motor Control Evaluation of Transversus Abdominis , 1996, Spine.
[47] S. Lund,et al. Effects of different head positions on postural sway in man induced by a reproducible vestibular error signal. , 1983, Acta physiologica Scandinavica.
[48] A. Pope,et al. On the interaction of hypnotizability and negative affect in chronic pain. Implications for the somatization of trauma. , 1996, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.
[49] Elena Peltz,et al. Functional connectivity of the human insular cortex during noxious and innocuous thermal stimulation , 2011, NeuroImage.
[50] Lars Arendt-Nielsen,et al. Experimental calf muscle pain attenuates the postural stability during quiet stance and perturbation. , 2010, Clinical biomechanics.
[51] S. Derbyshire,et al. Modeling pain circuits: how imaging may modify perception. , 2007, Neuroimaging clinics of North America.
[52] Nicolas Vuillerme,et al. How performing a mental arithmetic task modify the regulation of centre of foot pressure displacements during bipedal quiet standing , 2006, Experimental Brain Research.
[53] M. Orne,et al. Hypnotizability and phobic behavior. , 1976, Archives of general psychiatry.
[54] L. Rowell,et al. Exercise : regulation and integration of multiple systems , 1996 .
[55] R. John,et al. Hypnotizability and phobic behavior: further supporting data. , 1983, Journal of abnormal psychology.
[56] F. Horak,et al. Postural Orientation and Equilibrium , 2011 .
[57] K. Pribram,et al. Hypnotic analgesia: 1. Somatosensory event-related potential changes to noxious stimuli and 2. Transfer learning to reduce chronic low back pain. , 1998, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[58] P. Beek,et al. To freeze or not to freeze? Affective and cognitive perturbations have markedly different effects on postural control. , 2011, Human movement science.
[59] Stutman Rk,et al. Posttraumatic stress disorder, hypnotizability, and imagery. , 1985 .
[60] S. Aglioti,et al. Influence of imagined posture and imagery modality on corticospinal excitability , 2006, Behavioural Brain Research.
[61] J. Coast. Handbook of Physiology. Section 12. Exercise: Regulation and Integration of Multiple Systems , 1997 .
[62] P. Beek,et al. Cortical changes in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) , 2009, European journal of pain.
[63] J. Goldberg,et al. Relation between discharge regularity and responses to externally applied galvanic currents in vestibular nerve afferents of the squirrel monkey. , 1984, Journal of neurophysiology.
[64] Laura Sebastiani,et al. Suggestions of Altered Balance: Possible Equivalence of Imagery and Perception , 2006, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.
[65] B. Kröner-Herwig. Chronic pain syndromes and their treatment by psychological interventions , 2009, Current opinion in psychiatry.
[66] S. Spence,et al. Site-specific muscle hyper-reactivity in musicians with occupational upper limb pain. , 1992, Behaviour research and therapy.
[67] G. Moseley,et al. Disrupted working body schema of the trunk in people with back pain , 2009, British Journal of Sports Medicine.