Advances in Behaviour Research and Therapy
The psychobiology of chronic pain☆
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Cited by (108)
Neuroimaging the pain network – Implications for treatment
2019, Best Practice and Research: Clinical RheumatologyCitation Excerpt :It has lost its warning functions and attends with psychosocial changes. Normally, there is not only one triggering or maintaining cause but chronic pain is rather multicausal emphasizing the psychosocial model for the treatment of chronic pain [11]. Sub-acute pain lasts from 1 to 3–6 months.
Controllability and hippocampal activation during pain expectation in fibromyalgia syndrome
2016, Biological PsychologyDo clinicians think that pain can be a classically conditioned response to a non-noxious stimulus?
2016, Manual TherapyCitation Excerpt :Fear of pain and inappropriate muscle tension are both commonly associated with pain states (Flor et al., 1991; Vlaeyen and Linton, 2000), and we speculate that clinicians may conceptually link fear, pain and muscular responses together in a loose explanatory model that does not clearly distinguish between them. That classical conditioning could evoke pain in clinical scenarios has certainly been mooted - for example, Flor et al. (1990) noted that muscular responses can be increased by classical conditioning, and suggested that those who experience such conditioned muscular tension might “misinterpret” it as pain. Furthermore, classical conditioning mechanisms have been proposed to explain pain evoked by imagined movements (Moseley, 2004; Moseley et al., 2008, 2012).
Unconditioned and conditioned muscular responses in patients with chronic back pain and chronic tension-type headaches and in healthy controls
2010, PainCitation Excerpt :It can be seen as a psychophysiological correlate of learned fear and avoidance behavior. In this context, the learning process of classical conditioning is thought to be the underlying mechanism which bridges the gap between pain-related fear and increased pain by way of concomitant muscular reactivity [16–20]. Different models explaining the chronification of pain have included classical conditioning as an important mechanism: the fear-avoidance model of musculoskeletal pain [33,45], the biopsychosocial model of musculoskeletal disorders [19,20] and the model of myogenic headaches with its approach of dysfunctional increased muscular effort [7,8].
Psychological perspective on hand injury and pain
2010, Journal of Hand TherapyPsychological and Behavioral Assessment
2008, Raj's Practical Management of Pain
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The completion of this article was supported by grants # F1 156/1 and F1 156/2 from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft to the first, grant # 0701503 from the Bundesministerium für Forschung und Technologie to the second, and grants # R01 DE 07514 from the National Institute of Dental Research and ARNS 38698 from the National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal and Skin Disease to the third author. The authors are solely responsible for the contents of the publication.