13 results match your criteria: "and Laboratory of Clinical Neurophysiology[Affiliation]"

The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) has a 50-year history of publishing educational and research materials, ranging from traditional print format books, journals, and other informational formats to online and electronic formats. Here we provide a historical overview of IASP publications and reflections from the perspective of 5 former or current Editors-in-Chief.

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A large body of evidence supports an important role for calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in migraine pathophysiology. This evidence gave rise to a global effort to develop a new generation of therapeutics that inhibit the interaction of CGRP with its receptor in migraineurs. Recently, a new class of such drugs, humanized anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies (CGRP-mAbs), were found to be effective in reducing the frequency of migraine.

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Migraine photophobia originating in cone-driven retinal pathways.

Brain

July 2016

Department of Anesthesia, Critical Care and Pain Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston MA 02215, USA Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA

Migraine headache is uniquely exacerbated by light. Using psychophysical assessments in patients with normal eyesight we found that green light exacerbates migraine headache significantly less than white, blue, amber or red lights. To delineate mechanisms, we used electroretinography and visual evoked potential recording in patients, and multi-unit recording of dura- and light-sensitive thalamic neurons in rats to show that green activates cone-driven retinal pathways to a lesser extent than white, blue and red; that thalamic neurons are most responsive to blue and least responsive to green; and that cortical responses to green are significantly smaller than those generated by blue, amber and red lights.

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Objective: To verify the safety and clinical use of non-invasive high-voltage electrical stimulation (HVES) in patients with compressive radiculopathy. To test the feasibility of HVES to survey nerve root function during lumbosacral surgery.

Methods: In 20 patients undergoing lumbosacral surgery for degenerative spinal diseases, compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) evoked by maximal HVES were bilaterally recorded throughout surgery from L3 to S2 radicular territories.

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Prediction of chronic post-operative pain: pre-operative DNIC testing identifies patients at risk.

Pain

August 2008

Department of Neurology, Rambam Health Care Campus, and Laboratory of Clinical Neurophysiology, Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel Pain Relief Unit, Rambam Health Care Campus, and Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel Department of Thoracic Surgery, Rambam Health Care Campus, and Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Studies, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.

Surgical and medical procedures, mainly those associated with nerve injuries, may lead to chronic persistent pain. Currently, one cannot predict which patients undergoing such procedures are 'at risk' to develop chronic pain. We hypothesized that the endogenous analgesia system is key to determining the pattern of handling noxious events, and therefore testing diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC) will predict susceptibility to develop chronic post-thoracotomy pain (CPTP).

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Myasthenia gravis with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy - A case report.

Neurol India

March 1999

Department of Neurology and Laboratory of clinical Neurophysiology, Apollo Institute of Neurological Sciences, Apollo Hospital, Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.

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