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The Journal of Pain
US Association for the Study of Pain
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    • Cover Image - The Journal of Pain, Volume 24, Issue 3
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  • Critical Review

    How Neuroimaging Studies Have Challenged Us to Rethink: Is Chronic Pain a Disease?

    The Journal of Pain
    Vol. 10Issue 11p1113–1120Published in issue: November, 2009
    • Irene Tracey
    • M. Catherine Bushnell
    Cited in Scopus: 322
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      In this review, we present data from functional, structural, and molecular imaging studies in patients and animals supporting the notion that it might be time to reconsider chronic pain as a disease. Across a range of chronic pain conditions, similar observations have been made regarding changes in structure and function within the brains of patients. We discuss these observations within the framework of the current definition of a disease.
    • Critical Review

      Central Sensitization: A Generator of Pain Hypersensitivity by Central Neural Plasticity

      The Journal of Pain
      Vol. 10Issue 9p895–926Published in issue: September, 2009
      • Alban Latremoliere
      • Clifford J. Woolf
      Cited in Scopus: 2219
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        Central sensitization represents an enhancement in the function of neurons and circuits in nociceptive pathways caused by increases in membrane excitability and synaptic efficacy as well as to reduced inhibition and is a manifestation of the remarkable plasticity of the somatosensory nervous system in response to activity, inflammation, and neural injury. The net effect of central sensitization is to recruit previously subthreshold synaptic inputs to nociceptive neurons, generating an increased or augmented action potential output: a state of facilitation, potentiation, augmentation, or amplification.
        Central Sensitization: A Generator of Pain Hypersensitivity by Central Neural Plasticity
      • Critical Review

        Understanding Fibromyalgia: Lessons from the Broader Pain Research Community

        The Journal of Pain
        Vol. 10Issue 8p777–791Published in issue: August, 2009
        • David A. Williams
        • Daniel J. Clauw
        Cited in Scopus: 175
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          Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain condition marked by centrally mediated augmentation of pain and sensory processes. Skepticism has marked the history of this condition, but more recent study has identified neurobiological underpinnings supporting many of the symptoms associated with this condition. Early research in FM had unprecedented latitude within the rheumatology community to borrow heavily from theory and methods being applied in chronic pain research more generally. These insights facilitated rapid advances in FM research, not the least of which was the abandonment of a peripheral focus in favor of studying central mechanisms associated with central augmentation.
        • Critical Review

          Translational Pain Research: Achievements and Challenges

          The Journal of Pain
          Vol. 10Issue 10p1001–1011Published online: July 23, 2009
          • Jianren Mao
          Cited in Scopus: 81
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            The achievements in both preclinical and clinical pain research over the past 4 decades have led to significant progress in clinical pain management. However, pain research still faces enormous challenges and there remain many obstacles in the treatment of clinical pain, particularly chronic pain. Translational pain research needs to involve a number of important areas including: 1) bridging the gap between pain research and clinical pain management; 2) developing objective pain-assessment tools; 3) analyzing current theories of pain mechanisms and their relevance to clinical pain; 4) exploring new tools for both preclinical and clinical pain research; and 5) coordinating research efforts among basic scientists, clinical investigators, and pain-medicine practitioners.
          • Critical Review

            Genetic Contributions to Clinical Pain and Analgesia: Avoiding Pitfalls in Genetic Research

            The Journal of Pain
            Vol. 10Issue 7p663–693Published in issue: July, 2009
            • Hyungsuk Kim
            • David Clark
            • Raymond A. Dionne
            Cited in Scopus: 86
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              Understanding the genetic basis of human variations in pain is critical to elucidating the molecular basis of pain sensitivity, variable responses to analgesic drugs, and, ultimately, to individualized treatment of pain and improved public health. With the help of recently accumulated knowledge and advanced technologies, pain researchers hope to gain insight into genetic mechanisms of pain and eventually apply this knowledge to pain treatment.
              Genetic Contributions to Clinical Pain and Analgesia: Avoiding Pitfalls in Genetic Research
            • Critical Review

              Sex, Gender, and Pain: A Review of Recent Clinical and Experimental Findings

              The Journal of Pain
              Vol. 10Issue 5p447–485Published in issue: May, 2009
              • Roger B. Fillingim
              • Christopher D. King
              • Margarete C. Ribeiro-Dasilva
              • Bridgett Rahim-Williams
              • Joseph L. Riley III
              Cited in Scopus: 1715
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                Sex-related influences on pain and analgesia have become a topic of tremendous scientific and clinical interest, especially in the last 10 to 15 years. Members of our research group published reviews of this literature more than a decade ago, and the intervening time period has witnessed robust growth in research regarding sex, gender, and pain. Therefore, it seems timely to revisit this literature. Abundant evidence from recent epidemiologic studies clearly demonstrates that women are at substantially greater risk for many clinical pain conditions, and there is some suggestion that postoperative and procedural pain may be more severe among women than men.
                Sex, Gender, and Pain: A Review of Recent Clinical and Experimental Findings
              • Critical Review

                Experimental and Clinical Applications of Quantitative Sensory Testing Applied to Skin, Muscles and Viscera

                The Journal of Pain
                Vol. 10Issue 6p556–572Published online: April 20, 2009
                • Lars Arendt-Nielsen
                • David Yarnitsky
                Cited in Scopus: 375
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                  Quantification of the human painful sensory experience is an essential step in the translation of knowledge from animal nociception to human pain. Translational models for assessment of pain are very important, as such models can be used in: 1) basic mechanistic studies in healthy volunteers; 2) clinical studies for diagnostic and monitoring purposes; 3) pharmacological studies to evaluate analgesic efficacy of new and existing compounds. Quantitative pain assessment, or quantitative sensory testing (QST), provides psychophysical methods that systematically document alterations and reorganization in nervous system function and, in particular, the nociceptive system.
                  Experimental and Clinical Applications of Quantitative Sensory Testing Applied to Skin, Muscles and Viscera
                • Critical Review

                  Pain and Aging: The Emergence of a New Subfield of Pain Research

                  The Journal of Pain
                  Vol. 10Issue 4p343–353Published in issue: April, 2009
                  • Lucia Gagliese
                  Cited in Scopus: 132
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                    The pain and aging subfield has grown dramatically, including a 6-fold increase in publications over the last 2 decades. This subfield is based on the assumption that pain in older and younger adults differs in clinically and theoretically significant ways. If this were not the case, data from younger groups could be generalized to older persons, and the subfield would not be needed. This article considers the evidence for this assumption. Possible interpretations of the discrepant findings of age-related increases, decreases and stability in pain, including methodological limitations, challenges of gerontological research, and the possibility of nonuniform age-related variation, are discussed.
                    Pain and Aging: The Emergence of a New Subfield of Pain Research
                  • Opioid Treatment Guideline

                    Research Gaps on Use of Opioids for Chronic Noncancer Pain: Findings From a Review of the Evidence for an American Pain Society and American Academy of Pain Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline

                    The Journal of Pain
                    Vol. 10Issue 2p147–159.e15Published in issue: February, 2009
                    • Roger Chou
                    • Jane C. Ballantyne
                    • Gilbert J. Fanciullo
                    • Perry G. Fine
                    • Christine Miaskowski
                    Cited in Scopus: 273
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                      Chronic noncancer pain is common and use of opioids is increasing. Previously published guidelines on use of opioids for chronic noncancer pain have been based primarily on expert consensus due to lack of strong evidence. We conducted searches on Ovid MEDLINE and the Cochrane databases through July 2008 to identify studies that addressed one or more of 37 Key Questions that a multidisciplinary expert panel identified as important to be answered to generate evidence-based recommendations on the use of opioids for chronic noncancer pain.
                    • Opioid Treatment Guideline
                      Open Access

                      Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Chronic Opioid Therapy in Chronic Noncancer Pain

                      The Journal of Pain
                      Vol. 10Issue 2p113–130.e22Published in issue: February, 2009
                      • Roger Chou
                      • Gilbert J. Fanciullo
                      • Perry G. Fine
                      • Jeremy A. Adler
                      • Jane C. Ballantyne
                      • Pamela Davies
                      • and others
                      Cited in Scopus: 1745
                      Online Extra
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                        Use of chronic opioid therapy for chronic noncancer pain has increased substantially. The American Pain Society and the American Academy of Pain Medicine commissioned a systematic review of the evidence on chronic opioid therapy for chronic noncancer pain and convened a multidisciplinary expert panel to review the evidence and formulate recommendations. Although evidence is limited, the expert panel concluded that chronic opioid therapy can be an effective therapy for carefully selected and monitored patients with chronic noncancer pain.
                        Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Chronic Opioid Therapy in Chronic Noncancer Pain
                      • Opioid Treatment Guideline

                        Opioids for Chronic Noncancer Pain: Prediction and Identification of Aberrant Drug-Related Behaviors: A Review of the Evidence for an American Pain Society and American Academy of Pain Medicine Clinical Practice Guideline

                        The Journal of Pain
                        Vol. 10Issue 2p131–146.e5Published in issue: February, 2009
                        • Roger Chou
                        • Gilbert J. Fanciullo
                        • Perry G. Fine
                        • Christine Miaskowski
                        • Steven D. Passik
                        • Russell K. Portenoy
                        Cited in Scopus: 320
                        Online Extra
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                          Optimal methods to predict risk of aberrant drug-related behaviors before initiation of opioids for chronic noncancer pain and to identify aberrant behaviors after therapy is initiated are uncertain. We systematically reviewed published literature identified through searches of Ovid MEDLINE and the Cochrane databases through July 2008. Diagnostic test characteristics and accompanying confidence intervals were calculated with data extracted from the studies. Four prospective studies evaluated diagnostic accuracy of risk prediction instruments.
                        • Critical Review

                          Individual Differences in Pain Sensitivity: Measurement, Causation, and Consequences

                          The Journal of Pain
                          Vol. 10Issue 3p231–237Published online: January 30, 2009
                          • Christopher S. Nielsen
                          • Roland Staud
                          • Donald D. Price
                          Cited in Scopus: 199
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                            Not only are some clinical conditions experienced as more painful than others, but the variability in pain ratings of patients with the same disease or trauma is enormous. Available evidence indicates that to a large extent these differences reflect individual differences in pain sensitivity. Pain sensitivity can be estimated only through the use of well-controlled experimental pain stimuli. Such estimates show substantial heritability but equally important environmental effects. The genetic and environmental factors that influence pain sensitivity differ across pain modalities.
                            Individual Differences in Pain Sensitivity: Measurement, Causation, and Consequences
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