2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.06.036
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Modulation of motor-cortex oscillatory activity by painful Aδ- and C-fiber stimuli

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Cited by 87 publications
(59 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
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“…The fMRI has been used to study stimulus-related responses, such as noxious electrical stimulation of the skin or peripheral nerve (Davis, Taylor, Crawley, Wood, & Mikulis, 1997;Davis, Wood, Crawley, & Mikulis, 1995;Oshiro et al, 1998), noxious heat or cold (Apkarian, Darbar, Krauss, Gelnar, & Szeverenyi, 1999;Becerra et al, 1999;Davis, Kwan, Crawley, & Mikulis, 1998;Gelnar, Krauss, Sheehe, Szeverenyi, & Apkarian, 1999;Ploghaus et al, 1999;Raij, Forss, Stancak, & Hari, 2005), mechanical (Disbrow, Buonocore, Antognini, Carstens, & Rowley, 1998), chemical (Maihofner & Handwerker, 2005;Porro, Cettolo, Francescato, & Baraldi, 1998) or visceral stimuli (Binkofski et al, 1998). Brain areas that can be activated include the SI, SII, anterior insula, ACC, thalamus, and cerebellum.…”
Section: Patch-clamp Recording In Vivomentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The fMRI has been used to study stimulus-related responses, such as noxious electrical stimulation of the skin or peripheral nerve (Davis, Taylor, Crawley, Wood, & Mikulis, 1997;Davis, Wood, Crawley, & Mikulis, 1995;Oshiro et al, 1998), noxious heat or cold (Apkarian, Darbar, Krauss, Gelnar, & Szeverenyi, 1999;Becerra et al, 1999;Davis, Kwan, Crawley, & Mikulis, 1998;Gelnar, Krauss, Sheehe, Szeverenyi, & Apkarian, 1999;Ploghaus et al, 1999;Raij, Forss, Stancak, & Hari, 2005), mechanical (Disbrow, Buonocore, Antognini, Carstens, & Rowley, 1998), chemical (Maihofner & Handwerker, 2005;Porro, Cettolo, Francescato, & Baraldi, 1998) or visceral stimuli (Binkofski et al, 1998). Brain areas that can be activated include the SI, SII, anterior insula, ACC, thalamus, and cerebellum.…”
Section: Patch-clamp Recording In Vivomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Brain areas that can be activated include the SI, SII, anterior insula, ACC, thalamus, and cerebellum. With the combination of psychophysical assessment and fMRI, pain-related activations have been obtained in parallel psychophysical sessions (Apkarian et al, 1999) or during the imaging sessions (Davis et al, 1997;Porro et al, 1998;Raij et al, 2005) in order to separate those activations due to the mere presence of a stimulus (due to attention) from those related to the subjects" actual sensory experiences. On the other hand, the relationship and interaction of pain, attention, and anticipation has been demonstrated to activate slightly different areas of the brain (Davis et al, 1997;Ploghaus et al, 1999).…”
Section: Patch-clamp Recording In Vivomentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Firstly transcranial stimulation of the M1 may alter intracortical motor circuitry. According to Raij et al, high frequency rTMS (10 Hz) was found to re-establish intracortical inhibition in parallel with pain relief [23]. This inhibition of M1 activity was related to the existence of 20 Hz frequency cortical oscillations that are eliminated in the presence of chronic pain.…”
Section: Article In Pressmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Due to the widespread distribution of the BBA suppression, we cannot disentangle whether the reported effects mostly reflect processing in the motor cortex or processing in somatosensory areas. Previous studies showed that nociceptive stimuli cause a reduction of ongoing ϳ20 Hz oscillations both in the primary motor cortex (Raij et al, 2004) and in somatosensory areas (Ploner et al, 2006a). Thus, it may be that the sensorimotor BBA reflect parallel processing in somatosensory and motor areas, which form a functional network through coupling of neuronal populations (Schnitzler et al, 2000;Brovelli et al, 2002).…”
Section: Pain-induced Beta-band Responsesmentioning
confidence: 99%