Pain: Clinical and Experimental PerspectivesMatisyohu Weisenberg |
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Page 6
... tient behavior . There are some patients who , even when having a severe myocardi- al infarction , do not react much . Other pa- tients react a great deal even to mild physi- cal damage . Having an independent esti- mate of pain ...
... tient behavior . There are some patients who , even when having a severe myocardi- al infarction , do not react much . Other pa- tients react a great deal even to mild physi- cal damage . Having an independent esti- mate of pain ...
Page 28
... tients whose pain was not persistent . He , too , found pain to be associated relatively more often with diagnoses of hysteria and anxiety than with the psychoses . PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS AND PAIN It has been indicated that certain ...
... tients whose pain was not persistent . He , too , found pain to be associated relatively more often with diagnoses of hysteria and anxiety than with the psychoses . PERSONALITY CHARACTERISTICS AND PAIN It has been indicated that certain ...
Page 94
... tients ' sub - group . The normals and young patients had similar mean pain thresholds ( 2.5 and 2.8 % NaCl ) , but the older pa- tients had considerably higher thresholds ( mean 3.6 % NaCl ) with the medians showing even larger ...
... tients ' sub - group . The normals and young patients had similar mean pain thresholds ( 2.5 and 2.8 % NaCl ) , but the older pa- tients had considerably higher thresholds ( mean 3.6 % NaCl ) with the medians showing even larger ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
SECTION EIGHT | 6 |
Psychological aspects of pain | 24 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
acupuncture acupuncture analgesia afferent analgesia analgesic analysis of variance anesthesia anxiety Beecher behavior causalgia cells Clin clinical cognitive condition correlation cutaneous deep somatic pain differences in pain dissociation dorsal dorsal horn drugs effects emotional ence evaluation experimental pain factors fear female fibers gate control hand heart rate hypnosis hypnotic increase indicate intensity jects Journal male mean measures mechanisms Melzack ment Merskey method morphine muscle NaCl nerve neurone normal noxious nurse operation pain experience pain relief pain response pain sensation pain stimulus pain threshold pain tolerance patients perception physiological placebo placebo effect posterior horn cell postoperative pressure procedure produced psychiatric Psychol psychological recovery reduced rehearsal reported scores sensory significant skin spinal cord spinothalamic tract sponse stimulation subjects substantia gelatinosa suggestions surgery surgical Table technique thalamotomy thalamus theory tients tion tive tourniquet trial Tursky variables Wolff