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The last decade has seen major advances in the neurobiology of
pain, primarily resulting from a deeper understanding of the way in
which pain signals are coded and processed in the nervous system.
This volume in the Molecular and Cellular Neurobiology is the first
book for many years to present an integrated overview of the
current state of research into the neurobiology of chronic and
acute pain.
While recent molecular aspects of nociception are covered in some
detail, the book also emphasises the importance of viewing the pain
experience as the co-ordinated response of many different areas of
the nervous system. The molecular advances are set in the context
of the neurobiological system of pain processing. The appropriate
behavioural response to injury can therefore be thought of as the
result of the integration of information processed within areas of
the brain concerned with cognition, affect, sensory discrimination
and movement.
Chapters cover recent advances in nociceptor transduction
mechanisms, nociceptor plasticity and the biochemical anatomy of
pain pathways. Other contributions are concerned with the
development of pain systems and with the central processing of
nociceptive information studied with brain imaging techniques.
Several chapters additionally cover the mechanisms of clinically
important pain states such as neuropathic pain, cancer related pain
and migraine.
A new volume in the Molecular and Cellular Neurobiology series,
this volume presents a state-of-the-art account of the
neurobiological basis of pain, edited and written by the leading
scientists in this field.
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