Search results for "ICEP"

showing 10 items of 423 documents

High opiate receptor binding potential in the human lateral pain system

2005

To determine how opiate receptor distribution is co-localized with the distribution of nociceptive areas in the human brain, eleven male healthy volunteers underwent one PET scan with the subtype-nonselective opioidergic radioligand [(18)F]fluoroethyl-diprenorphine under resting conditions. The binding potential (BP), a parameter for the regional cerebral opioid receptor availability, was computed using the occipital cortex as reference region. The following regions of interest (ROIs) were defined on individual MR images: thalamus, sensory motor strip (SI/MI area), frontal operculum, parietal operculum, anterior insular cortex, posterior insular cortex, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC; peri-…

AdultMaleCingulate cortexCognitive NeuroscienceThalamusCaudate nucleusDiprenorphinePainInsular cortexbehavioral disciplines and activitiesCortex (anatomy)medicineHumansOperculum (brain)Anterior cingulate cortexbusiness.industryPutamenBrainNociceptorsAnatomyMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance Imagingmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemNeurologyPositron-Emission TomographyReceptors Opioidbusinesspsychological phenomena and processesNeuroImage
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Withdrawal reflex organisation to electrical stimulation of the dorsal foot in humans.

2001

The present study investigated excitatory reflex receptive fields for various muscle reflex responses and reflex mediated ankle joint movements using randomised electrical stimulation of the dorsal and plantar surface of the foot in 12 healthy subjects. Eleven electrodes (0.5-cm2 cathodes) were mounted on the dorsal side and three on the plantar side of the foot. A low (1.5 times pain threshold) and a high (2.3 times pain threshold) stimulus intensity were used to elicit the reflexes. EMG signals were recorded from tibialis anterior (TA), gastrocnemius medialis (GM), soleus (SO), biceps femoris (BF), and rectus femoris (RF) muscles together with the ankle movement measured by a goniometer. …

AdultMaleHeelMovementWithdrawal reflexPainElectromyographyBicepsThreshold of painReflexReaction TimeMedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalSkinmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryElectromyographyFootGeneral NeuroscienceNociceptorsAnatomyMiddle AgedElectric Stimulationmedicine.anatomical_structureReceptive fieldReflexFemaleAnkleTibial NervebusinessAnkle JointExperimental brain research
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Pulpal ischemia in man: effects on detection threshold, A-delta neural response and sharp dental pain

1999

— Preferential blocks of peripheral nerves have shown that myelinated nerves are more susceptible to local compression and less resistent to asphyxia than unmyelinated fibers. Since two groups of functionally different nociceptors exist in the dental pulp, it is of theoretical and clinical interest to determine the influence of ischemia on the sensitivity of human dental pulp, using standard means for testing tooth vitality and at the same time investigating the intensity coding in one pathway of the afferent trigeminal system. Adrenaline was used to study the differential effect of adrenaline-induced ischemia on intradental A-delta nerve activity (INA) and the concomitant sharp pain, as we…

AdultMaleHot TemperatureEpinephrineDental Pulp TestIschemiaSensory systemStimulationNerve Fibers MyelinatedSharp Painstomatognathic systemIschemiaPredictive Value of TestsmedicineHumansAnesthetics LocalDental PulpPain MeasurementAfferent PathwaysDentin Sensitivitybusiness.industryLidocaineNociceptorsTooth surfaceToothacheMiddle AgedAdequate stimulusmedicine.diseaseCold Temperaturestomatognathic diseasesSensory ThresholdsAnesthesiaNociceptorRegression AnalysisFemalePerceptionOral SurgerybusinessDental Traumatology
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Left-hemisphere dominance in early nociceptive processing in the human parasylvian cortex.

2003

Pain perception comprises sensory and emotional dimensions. While the emotional experience is thought to be represented in the right hemisphere, we here report a left-hemisphere dominance for the early sensory component of pain perception using brain electrical source analysis of laser-evoked potentials. Ten right-handed subjects underwent several series of laser radiant heat stimuli to pairs of parallel lines on the dorsum of the left or right hand. Stimulus location and intensity were randomised independently. The sensory-discriminative aspects of pain were emphasised by asking the subjects to perform either a spatial or an intensity discrimination task and were contrasted with active dis…

AdultMaleHot TemperatureLaser-Evoked PotentialsCognitive NeurosciencePainSensory systemStimulus (physiology)ElectroencephalographyBrain mappingLateralization of brain functionMental ProcessesmedicineHumansAttentionDominance CerebralCerebral CortexBrain Mappingmedicine.diagnostic_testElectroencephalographyMagnetic Resonance ImagingNociceptionNeurologyFemalePerceptionPsychologyNeuroscienceInsulaNeuroImage
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C- and Aδ-fiber components of heat-evoked cerebral potentials in healthy human subjects

1999

Feedback-controlled laser heat was used to stimulate the hairy skin of the hand dorsum and forearm, and heat-evoked cerebral potentials were recorded at midline (Fz, Cz, Pz) and temporal (T3, T4) scalp positions. Based on data from primary afferent electrophysiology a stimulus level (40 degrees C) was chosen, which is above C-fiber heat threshold, but clearly below A delta-nociceptor heat threshold in order to excite selectively C-fibers without concomitant excitation of A delta-fibers. Feedback-controlled stepped heat stimuli to 40 degrees C elicited ultralate laser evoked potentials (LEPs) at the vertex in a high proportion of experiments (90%). Estimates of conduction velocity calculated…

AdultMaleHot TemperatureLaser-Evoked PotentialsStimulus (physiology)Nerve conduction velocityFeedbackNerve FibersReference ValuesReaction TimeNoxious stimulusHumansEvoked potentialEvoked PotentialsSkinChemistryLasersBrainMiddle AgedElectrophysiologyAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineNociceptionNeurologyNociceptorFemaleNeurology (clinical)NeurosciencePain
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Roles of capsaicin-insensitive nociceptors in cutaneous pain and secondary hyperalgesia.

2001

Polymodal nociceptors respond to mechanical, thermal and chemical stimuli. Whereas sensitivities to heat and to the irritant substance capsaicin have recently been linked via the properties of the vanilloid receptor type 1 receptor ion channel, sensitivity to noxious mechanical stimuli such as the pinpricks used in clinical neurology seems to be unrelated. We investigated the peripheral neural basis of pinprick pain using quantitative psychophysical techniques combined with selective conduction block by nerve compression and selective desensitization by topical capsaicin treatment. Complete A-fibre block by compression of the superficial radial nerve (criterion: loss of first pain sensation…

AdultMaleHot TemperaturePainNerve Fibers Myelinatedchemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineHumansIntradermal injectionAxonSensitizationbusiness.industryNociceptorsMiddle AgedNociceptionmedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryCapsaicinHyperalgesiaAnesthesiaHyperalgesiaNeuropathic painNociceptorSomatosensory DisordersFemaleRadial NerveNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomCapsaicinbusinessBrain : a journal of neurology
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Inward currents in primary nociceptive neurons of the rat and pain sensations in humans elicited by infrared diode laser pulses

2002

Radiant heat is often used to study nociception in vivo. We now used infrared radiation generated by a diode laser stimulator (wavelength 980 nm) to investigate transduction mechanisms for noxious heat stimuli in acutely dissociated dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons of rats in vitro. The laser stimulator offered the unique opportunity to test whether the same stimuli also elicit pain sensations in humans. A specific heat-induced current (I(heat)) was elicited in six of 13 small DRG neurons (diameteror =30 microm) tested in the whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp mode. Current responses in the seven heat-insensitive neurons were within the range explainable by the temperature depend…

AdultMaleHot TemperaturePatch-Clamp TechniquesPainSensory systemIn Vitro TechniquesMembrane PotentialsRats Sprague-DawleyDorsal root ganglionEvoked Potentials SomatosensoryGanglia SpinalNoxious stimulusmedicinePsychophysicsAnimalsHumansPatch clampNeurons AfferentSkinChemistryLasersNociceptorsMiddle AgedSensory neuronRatsElectrophysiologyKineticsAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineNociceptionmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurologyFemaleNeurology (clinical)Transduction (physiology)Neuroscience
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Spinal Endocannabinoids and CB 1 Receptors Mediate C-Fiber–Induced Heterosynaptic Pain Sensitization

2009

Plastic Pain Perception Drugs and endocannabinoids acting on cannabinoid (CB) receptors have potential in the treatment of certain types of pain. In the spinal cord they are believed to suppress nociception, the perception of pain and noxious stimuli. Pernia-Andrade et al. (p. 760 ) now find that endocannabinoids, which are released in spinal cord by noxious stimulation, may promote rather than inhibit nociception by acting on CB1 receptors. Endocannabinoids not only depress transmission at excitatory synapses in the spinal cord, but also block the release of inhibitory neurotransmitters, thereby facilitating nociception.

AdultMaleInterneuronPainMice TransgenicNeurotransmissionInhibitory postsynaptic potentialSynaptic TransmissionArticleRats Sprague-DawleyMiceYoung AdultPiperidinesReceptor Cannabinoid CB1InterneuronsCannabinoid Receptor ModulatorsmedicineAnimalsHumansPosterior Horn CellNerve Fibers UnmyelinatedMultidisciplinaryExcitatory Postsynaptic PotentialsNeural InhibitionAnatomySpinal cordElectric StimulationRatsMice Inbred C57BLPosterior Horn Cellsmedicine.anatomical_structureNociceptionInhibitory Postsynaptic PotentialsSpinal Cordnervous systemHyperalgesiaHyperalgesiaNeuropathic painPyrazolesFemaleRimonabantmedicine.symptomNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesEndocannabinoidsScience
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Human isometric force production and electromyogram activity of knee extensor muscles in water and on dry land.

1999

This study was designed to determine trial-to-trial and day-to-day reproducibility of isometric force and electromyogram activity (EMG) of the knee extensor muscles in water and on dry land as well as to make comparisons between the two training conditions in muscle activity and force production. A group of 20 healthy subjects (12 women and 8 men) were tested three times over 2 weeks. A measurement session consisted of recordings of maximal and submaximal isometric knee extension force with simultaneous recording of surface EMG from the vastus medialis, vastus lateralis and biceps femoris muscles. To ensure identical measurement conditions the same patient elevator chair was used in both th…

AdultMaleKnee JointPhysiologyVastus medialisIntraclass correlationIsometric exerciseElectromyographyBicepsIsometric ContractionMedicineHumansMuscle SkeletalHydrotherapyReproducibilityKnee extensorsmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryElectromyographyPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthReproducibility of ResultsWaterAnatomyElectrophysiologyFemalebusinessBiomedical engineeringEuropean journal of applied physiology and occupational physiology
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Effects of muscle – tendon length on joint moment and power during sprint starts

2005

The aim of this study was to examine the effects of muscle-tendon length on joint moment and power during maximal sprint starts. Nine male sprinters performed maximal sprint starts from the blocks that were adjusted either to 40 degrees or 65 degrees to the horizontal. Ground reaction forces were recorded at 833 Hz using a force platform and kinematic data were recorded at 200 Hz with a film camera. Joint moments and powers were analysed using kinematic and kinetic data. Muscle - tendon lengths of the medial gastrocnemius, soleus, vastus medialis, rectus femoris and biceps femoris were calculated from the set position to the end of the first single leg contact. The results indicated that bl…

AdultMaleKnee JointVastus medialisAccelerationPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationGeometryKinematicsBicepsRunningTendonsmedicineHumansOrthopedics and Sports MedicineForce platformGround reaction forceMathematicsAustraliaBiomechanicsAnatomyBiomechanical PhenomenaTendonmedicine.anatomical_structureSprintHip JointAnkle JointJournal of Sports Sciences
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