Cortical representation of experimental tooth pain in humans
暂无分享,去创建一个
H. Handwerker | C. Forster | C. Forster | H. O. Handwerker | P. Kemppainen | H. H. F. Jantsch | P. Kemppainen | R. Ringler | R. Ringler | H. Jantsch
[1] G. M. Murray,et al. Effects of reversible inactivation by cooling of the primate face motor cortex on the performance of a trained tongue-protrusion task and a trained biting task. , 1991, Journal of neurophysiology.
[2] Martin Koltzenburg,et al. A novel technique for the evaluation of mechanical pain and hyperalgesia , 1991, Pain.
[3] H. Handwerker,et al. Regional brain oxygenation during phasic and tonic painful stimulation. , 2000, Progress in brain research.
[4] M. Kaste,et al. Masticatory Force and Function in Patients with Hemispheric Brain Infarction and Hemiplegia , 1999, Journal of dental research.
[5] David Borsook,et al. Noxious hot and cold stimulation produce common patterns of brain activation in humans: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study , 2000, Neuroscience Letters.
[6] H. Breiter,et al. Reward Circuitry Activation by Noxious Thermal Stimuli , 2001, Neuron.
[7] Sterling C. Johnson,et al. Anteroposterior somatotopy of innocuous cooling activation focus in human dorsal posterior insular cortex. , 2005, American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology.
[8] Roland Peyron,et al. Role of Operculoinsular Cortices in Human Pain Processing: Converging Evidence from PET, fMRI, Dipole Modeling, and Intracerebral Recordings of Evoked Potentials , 2002, NeuroImage.
[9] S. Thorpe,et al. The orbitofrontal cortex: Neuronal activity in the behaving monkey , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[10] Ove Franzén,et al. Information Processing in the Somatosensory System , 1991 .
[11] Jonathan C. W. Brooks,et al. Somatotopic organisation of the human insula to painful heat studied with high resolution functional imaging , 2005, NeuroImage.
[12] J. Kaas,et al. Representations of the face, teeth and oral cavity in areas 3b and 1 of somatosensory cortex in squirrel monkeys , 1986, Brain Research.
[13] H Burton,et al. Somatotopographic organization in the second somatosensory area of M. fascicularis , 1980, The Journal of comparative neurology.
[14] M. Närhi,et al. Dental injury models: experimental tools for understanding neuroinflammatory interactions and polymodal nociceptor functions. , 1999, Critical reviews in oral biology and medicine : an official publication of the American Association of Oral Biologists.
[15] K. Davis,et al. The neural circuitry of pain as explored with functional MRI , 2000, Neurological research.
[16] T. Huopaniemi,et al. Modification of dental pain and cutaneous thermal sensitivity by physical exercise in man , 1985, Brain Research.
[17] C. Büchel,et al. Dissociable Neural Responses Related to Pain Intensity, Stimulus Intensity, and Stimulus Awareness within the Anterior Cingulate Cortex: A Parametric Single-Trial Laser Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study , 2002, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[18] A. Craig. How do you feel? Interoception: the sense of the physiological condition of the body , 2002, Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
[19] Antti S. J. Virtanen,et al. Electrical stimulation of pulp nerves— comparison of monopolar and bipolar electrode coupling , 1985, Pain.
[20] T. Huopaniemi,et al. The effect of temporal parameters on subjective sensations evoked by electrical tooth stimulation , 1987, Pain.
[21] T. Huopaniemi,et al. Conduction velocities of single pulp nerve fibre units in the cat. , 1982 .
[22] R. Lemon. Functional properties of monkey motor cortex neurones receiving afferent input from the hand and fingers , 1981, The Journal of physiology.
[23] R. Porter,et al. A comparison of the responsiveness to peripheral stimuli of pre-central cortical neurones in anaesthetized and conscious monkeys [proceedings]. , 1976, The Journal of physiology.
[24] Anthony K. P. Jones,et al. Pain processing during three levels of noxious stimulation produces differential patterns of central activity , 1997, Pain.
[25] Michio Tanaka,et al. Organization of the First Somatosensory Cortex for Manipulation of Objects: An Analysis of Behavioral Changes Induced by Muscimol Injection into Identified Cortical Loci of Awake Monkeys , 1991 .
[26] S Thesen,et al. Prospective acquisition correction for head motion with image‐based tracking for real‐time fMRI , 2000, Magnetic resonance in medicine.
[27] J. Murphy,et al. Spatial organization of precentral cortex in awake primates. III. Input-output coupling. , 1978, Journal of neurophysiology.
[28] B. Vogt,et al. Contributions of anterior cingulate cortex to behaviour. , 1995, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[29] M. Posner,et al. Cognitive and emotional influences in anterior cingulate cortex , 2000, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[30] D. Meier,et al. Cortical Activation Resulting from Painless Vibrotactile Dental Stimulation Measured by Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) , 2004, Journal of dental research.
[31] A. Craig. A new view of pain as a homeostatic emotion , 2003, Trends in Neurosciences.
[32] G. M. Murray,et al. The effect of bilateral cold block of the primate face primary somatosensory cortex on the performance of trained tongue-protrusion task and biting tasks. , 1993, Journal of neurophysiology.
[33] Richard F. Martin,et al. Nociceptive responses of trigeminal neurons in SII-7b cortex of awake monkeys , 1989, Brain Research.
[34] Peter Svensson,et al. Central representation of muscle pain and mechanical hyperesthesia in the orofacial region: a positron emission tomography study , 2004, Pain.
[35] M. Närhi,et al. The Characteristics of Intradental Sensory Units and Their Responses to Stimulation , 1985, Journal of dental research.
[36] A. D. Craig,et al. Human feelings: why are some more aware than others? , 2004, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
[37] H. Handwerker,et al. The importance of stimulus site and intensity in differences of pain-induced vascular reflexes in human orofacial regions , 2001, Pain.
[38] H. Handwerker,et al. BOLD effects in different areas of the cerebral cortex during painful mechanical stimulation , 2003, Pain.
[39] P. Roland. Cortical representation of pain , 1992, Trends in Neurosciences.
[40] H Asanuma,et al. Experiments on functional role of peripheral input to motor cortex during voluntary movements in the monkey. , 1984, Journal of neurophysiology.
[41] G. M. Murray,et al. Features of cortically evoked swallowing in the awake primate (Macaca fascicularis). , 1999, Journal of neurophysiology.
[42] Stanley J. Goodman,et al. Elevation of pain threshold to tooth shock by brain stimulation in primates , 1980, Brain Research.
[43] E. Reiman,et al. Thermosensory activation of insular cortex , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.
[44] S. Clare,et al. Imaging how attention modulates pain in humans using functional MRI. , 2002, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[45] H. Handwerker,et al. Differences Between Tooth Stimulation and Capsaicin-induced Neurogenic Vasodilatation in Human Gingiva , 2003, Journal of dental research.
[46] E. Luschei,et al. Alterations in the pattern of mastication after ablations of the lateral precentral cortex in rhesus macaques , 1980, Experimental Neurology.
[47] E. Disbrow,et al. Somatosensory cortex: A comparison of the response to noxious thermal, mechanical, and electrical stimuli using functional magnetic resonance imaging , 1998, Human brain mapping.
[48] C. Büchel,et al. The anterior cingulate cortex contains distinct areas dissociating external from self-administered painful stimulation: a parametric fMRI study , 2005, Pain.