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Human Experimental Pain Models
Author Bios
Learning Objectives
Clinical Significance and Phenomenology
Complex Diseases: Need to Simplify
Model Requirements
Brief and Sustained Experimental Pain
Currently selected section: Choice of the Pain Stimulus
A Model Design for Pain Experimentation
Experiential Adjustment
Choice of Stimulation Site
Stimulation Site for a Study of TMJD
Experimental Design
Model Validation: Level 1
Model Validation: Level 2
Model Validation: Level 3
Model Validation: An Example
Cross-Validation with Other Model Systems
Model Systems as Tools
Sample Size Estimation
Potential Difficulties
Conclusion

 

Chapter 21: Human Experimental Pain Models: Choice of the Pain Stimulus
        

Question 6.2

Which one of the following statements is true?

Selection A Noxious thermal and electrical pulses, the intra-dermal injection of capsaicin, and the intramuscular infusion of saline or third molar extractions are valid model systems for the study of all clinical conditions involving pain.
Selection B Unlike for pain stimuli of brief duration during which subjects' pain perception is primarily captured by sensory descriptors (e.g. aching, throbbing, radiating), prolonged and sustained pain stimuli induce significant pain affect.
Selection C A pain challenge applied to superficial tissue, such as skin, is appealing due to the obvious experimental convenience and clinical relevance.
Selection D Time in pain minimally influences the subject's physiological state and response behavior.
Selection E A noxious stimulus of a given magnitude induces similar bio-behavioral effects in healthy subjects.

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