Pain Sensations and Reactions |
Contents
The Impact of Nineteenth Century Neurophysiology | 3 |
The Contemporary Arguments for Considering Pain a Sen | 12 |
Summary | 24 |
Copyright | |
20 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
aching pain afferent AFFERENT NERVE analgesia analgesic anesthesia aperture areas of skin average burning pain cent cerebral cortex codeine control areas cord cowhage dermatomes dolorimeter dols duration elicited evoke pain excitatory experienced experimental exposure faradic fibers forearm forehead galvanic skin response GOODELL heat hyper hyperalgesic area hypnotic impulses increased individual induced pain injection injury intensity of pain intervals intractable pain itching itchy skin lower measurements of pain Ment method minutes morphine sulfate muscle nerve neural neurons normal noxious stimulation observations pain experience pain intensity pain sensation pain thresh pain threshold pain threshold measurements pathways patients peripheral Physiol pin prick prefrontal lobotomy pressure pricking pain threshold procaine procedure radiometer reactions to pain referred pain reported scale secondary hyperalgesia segmental sensory skin areas skin temperature spatial summation stimulus intensity structures thermal radiation three subjects threshold pain tickle tion tissue damage visceral WOLFF zone