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Your search keyword '"Jamie L. Rhudy"' showing total 122 results

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122 results on '"Jamie L. Rhudy"'

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1. The Relationship Between Experienced Discrimination and Pronociceptive Processes in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

3. Modulation of the nociceptive flexion reflex by conservative therapy in patients and healthy people: a systematic review and meta-analysis

4. Psychosocial and cardiometabolic predictors of chronic pain onset in Native Americans: serial mediation analyses of 2-year prospective data from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

7. Examining Configural, Metric, and Scalar Invariance of the Pain Catastrophizing Scale in Native American and Non-Hispanic White Adults in the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

8. Exploration of the trait-activation model of pain catastrophizing in Native Americans: results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American pain risk (OK-SNAP)

9. Assessing peripheral fibers, pain sensitivity, central sensitization, and descending inhibition in Native Americans: main findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

10. Conditioned Pain Modulation in Sexual Assault Survivors

11. Sensory, Affective, and Catastrophizing Reactions to Multiple Stimulus Modalities: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

12. Are cardiometabolic markers of allostatic load associated with pronociceptive processes in Native Americans?: A structural equation modeling analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

13. Does Threat Enlarge Nociceptive Reflex Receptive Fields?

14. The relationship between adverse life events and endogenous inhibition of pain and spinal nociception: Findings from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

17. Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation of the Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Alters Emotional Modulation of Spinal Nociception

18. Behavioral Inhibition and Behavioral Activation are Related to Habituation of Nociceptive Flexion Reflex, but Not Pain Ratings

19. Pain-related anxiety promotes pronociceptive processes in Native Americans: bootstrapped mediation analyses from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

20. Impairment of Inhibition of Trigeminal Nociception via Conditioned Pain Modulation in Persons with Migraine Headaches

21. Race/Ethnicity Does Not Moderate the Relationship Between Adverse Life Experiences and Temporal Summation of the Nociceptive Flexion Reflex and Pain: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk

22. (265) The Relationship between Discrimination and Pain Tolerance and its Potential Mediation by Stress: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

23. (268) Blood Pressure as a Prospective Predictor of Chronic Pain Development: Results from Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

24. (261) Does Anger Inhibition Alter Pain Modulation?

25. Experimental reduction of pain catastrophizing modulates pain report but not spinal nociception as verified by mediation analyses

26. Nociceptive Processing in Women With Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD)

27. Affective disturbance associated with premenstrual dysphoric disorder does not disrupt emotional modulation of pain and spinal nociception

28. (101) Using Quantitative Sensory Testing to Assess the Pain System in Sexual Assault Survivors

29. (185) A Qualitative Analysis of Pain Meaning: Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

30. (263) Less Efficient Endogenous Inhibition of Spinal Nociception Predicts Chronic Pain Onset: A Prospective Analysis from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)

31. Is blood glucose associated with descending modulation of spinal nociception as measured by the nociceptive flexion reflex?

32. Endogenous inhibition of pain and spinal nociception in women with premenstrual dysphoric disorder

33. Respiration-Induced Hypoalgesia: Exploration of Potential Mechanisms

34. (447) Does trauma exposure affect temporal summation of pain and the nociceptive flexion reflex?

35. (293) Is risk for diabetes associated with disrupted descending modulation of pain and spinal nociception?

36. Reliability and Validity of a Brief Method to Assess Nociceptive Flexion Reflex (NFR) Threshold

37. Pain catastrophizing is related to temporal summation of pain but not temporal summation of the nociceptive flexion reflex

38. The effect of the menstrual cycle on affective modulation of pain and nociception in healthy women

39. State catastrophizing is associated with facilitation of spinal nociception during conditioned pain modulation (CPM)

40. Is conditioned pain modulation disrupted in sexual assault survivors?

42. Experimental Assessment of Affective Processing in Fibromyalgia

43. Emotional control of nociceptive reactions (ECON): Do affective valence and arousal play a role?

44. The Influence of Conditioned Fear on Human Pain Thresholds: Does Preparedness Play a Role?

45. Defining the nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR) threshold in human participants: A comparison of different scoring criteria

46. Does In Vivo Catastrophizing Engage Descending Modulation of Spinal Nociception?

47. Fear-induced hypoalgesia in humans: Effects on low intensity thermal stimulation and finger temperature

49. Individual Differences in the Emotional Reaction to Shock Determine Whether Hypoalgesia Is Observed

50. Negative affect: effects on an evaluative measure of human pain

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