1. Sex and gender differences in pain and analgesia
- Author
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Jeffrey S. Mogil and Andrea L Bailey
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Analgesic ,Alternative medicine ,Chronic pain ,medicine.disease ,Affect (psychology) ,Clinical reality ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Practice ,Medicine ,Animal studies ,business ,Sex characteristics - Abstract
It is a clinical reality that women make up the large majority of chronic pain patients, and there is now consensus from laboratory experiments that when differences are seen, women are more sensitive to pain than men. Research in this field has now begun to concentrate on finding explanations for this sex difference. Although sex differences in sociocultural, psychological, and experiential factors likely play important roles, evidence largely from animal studies has revealed surprisingly robust and often qualitative sex differences at low levels of the neuraxis. Although not yet able to affect clinical practice, the continued study of sex differences in pain may have important implications for the development of new analgesic strategies.
- Published
- 2010
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