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1. Trauma and inflammation modulate lymphocyte localization in vivo: Quantitation of tissue entry and retention using Indium-111-labeled lymphocytes

2. Basic science of pain.

4. Spinal cannabinoid receptor type 2 agonist reduces mechanical allodynia and induces mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatases in a rat model of neuropathic pain.

5. Mitogen activated protein kinase phosphatase-1 prevents the development of tactile sensitivity in a rodent model of neuropathic pain.

6. Propentofylline, a CNS glial modulator does not decrease pain in post-herpetic neuralgia patients: in vitro evidence for differential responses in human and rodent microglia and macrophages.

7. Morphine tolerance attenuates the resolution of postoperative pain and enhances spinal microglial p38 and extracellular receptor kinase phosphorylation.

8. Evidence for a role of endocannabinoids, astrocytes and p38 phosphorylation in the resolution of postoperative pain.

9. Cannabinoid receptor type 2 activation induces a microglial anti-inflammatory phenotype and reduces migration via MKP induction and ERK dephosphorylation.

10. Morphine enhances microglial migration through modulation of P2X4 receptor signaling.

11. The contributing role of CD14 in toll-like receptor 4 dependent neuropathic pain.

12. Differential migration, LPS-induced cytokine, chemokine, and NO expression in immortalized BV-2 and HAPI cell lines and primary microglial cultures.

13. A comparison of spinal Iba1 and GFAP expression in rodent models of acute and chronic pain.

14. Neuroimmune interactions and pain: focus on glial-modulating targets.

15. Propentofylline-induced astrocyte modulation leads to alterations in glial glutamate promoter activation following spinal nerve transection.

16. Spinal microglial and perivascular cell cannabinoid receptor type 2 activation reduces behavioral hypersensitivity without tolerance after peripheral nerve injury.

17. CNS-infiltrating CD4+ T lymphocytes contribute to murine spinal nerve transection-induced neuropathic pain.

18. Neuregulin 1 is a pronociceptive cytokine that is regulated by progesterone in the spinal cord: implications for sex specific pain modulation.

19. Minocycline decreases in vitro microglial motility, beta1-integrin, and Kv1.3 channel expression.

20. Cancer chemotherapy impairs contextual but not cue-specific fear memory.

21. Induction of interleukin-1beta by interleukin-4 in lipopolysaccharide-treated mixed glial cultures: microglial-dependent effects.

22. Reprint of "efficacy of propentofylline, a glial modulating agent, on existing mechanical allodynia following peripheral nerve injury" [Brain Behav. Immun. 21 (2007) 238-246].

23. Efficacy of propentofylline, a glial modulating agent, on existing mechanical allodynia following peripheral nerve injury.

24. Differential regulation of neuregulin 1 expression by progesterone in astrocytes and neurons.

25. Effects of interleukin-1 beta, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor on sensitivity of dorsal root ganglion and peripheral receptive fields in rats.

26. Induction of astrocyte differentiation by propentofylline increases glutamate transporter expression in vitro: heterogeneity of the quiescent phenotype.

27. Role of astrocytic S100beta in behavioral hypersensitivity in rodent models of neuropathic pain.

28. Propentofylline attenuates vincristine-induced peripheral neuropathy in the rat.

29. Differential spinal cord gene expression in rodent models of radicular and neuropathic pain.

30. Progesterone mediates gonadal hormone differences in tactile and thermal hypersensitivity following L5 nerve root ligation in female rats.

31. Sex differences in lumbar spinal cord gene expression following experimental lumbar radiculopathy.

32. The magnitude of mechanical allodynia in a rodent model of lumbar radiculopathy is dependent on strain and sex.

33. Transcriptional and translational regulation of glial activation by morphine in a rodent model of neuropathic pain.

34. The CNS role of Toll-like receptor 4 in innate neuroimmunity and painful neuropathy.

35. The organizational and activational effects of sex hormones on tactile and thermal hypersensitivity following lumbar nerve root injury in male and female rats.

36. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR assessment of spinal microglial and astrocytic activation markers in a rat model of neuropathic pain.

37. Complete Freunds adjuvant-induced peripheral inflammation evokes glial activation and proinflammatory cytokine expression in the CNS.

38. Mechanical thresholds for initiation and persistence of pain following nerve root injury: mechanical and chemical contributions at injury.

39. Neuroimmune activation and neuroinflammation in chronic pain and opioid tolerance/hyperalgesia.

40. Attenuation of morphine tolerance, withdrawal-induced hyperalgesia, and associated spinal inflammatory immune responses by propentofylline in rats.

41. Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) mediates astrocyte activation in response to the Gram-positive bacterium Staphylococcus aureus.

42. Presence of spinal B7.2 (CD86) but not B7.1 (CD80) co-stimulatory molecules following peripheral nerve injury: role of nondestructive immunity in neuropathic pain.

43. The role of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor NR1 subunit in peripheral nerve injury-induced mechanical allodynia, glial activation and chemokine expression in the mouse.

44. Anti-hyperalgesic and morphine-sparing actions of propentofylline following peripheral nerve injury in rats: mechanistic implications of spinal glia and proinflammatory cytokines.

45. Inhibition of microglial activation attenuates the development but not existing hypersensitivity in a rat model of neuropathy.

46. The Role of Cytokines in the Initiation and Maintenance of Chronic Pain.

47. Nerve root injury severity differentially modulates spinal glial activation in a rat lumbar radiculopathy model: considerations for persistent pain.

48. The role of spinal neuroimmune activation in morphine tolerance/hyperalgesia in neuropathic and sham-operated rats.

49. Focal peripheral nerve injury induces leukocyte trafficking into the central nervous system: potential relationship to neuropathic pain.

50. The active metabolite of leflunomide, an immunosuppressive agent, reduces mechanical sensitivity in a rat mononeuropathy model.

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