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1. Multisensory Sensitivity is Related to Deep-Tissue but Not Cutaneous Pain Sensitivity in Healthy Individuals

2. Development of a method to maximize the transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation intensity in women with fibromyalgia

3. Skin impedance is not a factor in transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation effectiveness

4. Activation of protein kinase C in the spinal cord produces mechanical hyperalgesia by activating glutamate receptors, but does not mediate chronic muscle-induced hyperalgesia

5. Examining sex differences in knee pain: the Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study

6. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for acute pain: A review

7. EFFECTS OF AN NMDA RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND MAINTENANCE OF MECHANICAL HYPERALGESIA INDUCED BY INTRAMUSCULAR INJECTION OF ACIDIC SALINE

8. SYSTEMIC ADMINISTRATION OF CLONIDINE IN COMBINATION WITH TENS PRODUCES AN INCREASED ANTIHYPERALGESIA IN RATS

9. LOW FREQUENCY, BUT NOT HIGH FREQUENCY, TENS IS LESS EFFECTIVE IN REDUCING HYPERALGESIA IN MORPHINE TOLERANT RATS WITH ARTHRITIS

10. BLOCKADE OF MU-OPIOID RECEPTORS IN THE ROSTRAL VENTRAL MEDULLA (RVM) PREVENTS ANTIHYPERALGESIA PRODUCED BY LOW FREQUENCY BUT NOT HIGH FREQUENCY TENS

11. Hormonal modulation of connective tissue homeostasis and sex differences in risk for osteoarthritis of the knee

12. Mechanical contributors to sex differences in idiopathic knee osteoarthritis

15. Hypoalgesia in Response to Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) Depends on Stimulation Intensity.

16. Deep tissue afferents, but not cutaneous afferents, mediate transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation-induced antihyperalgesia.

17. Addressing the gaps: sex differences in osteoarthritis of the knee

18. Hormonal modulation of connective tissue homeostasis and sex differences in risk for osteoarthritis of the knee

19. Neural and psychosocial contributions to sex differences in knee osteoarthritic pain

20. Mechanical contributors to sex differences in idiopathic knee osteoarthritis

21. Women with knee osteoarthritis have more pain and poorer function than men, but similar physical activity prior to total knee replacement

22. Genetic reduction of chronic muscle pain in mice lacking calcium/calmodulin-stimulated adenylyl cyclases

23. Pregabalin produces analgesia in males but not females in an animal model of chronic widespread muscle pain.

24. Categories of the Patient-Specific Functional Scale Activities in Chronic Neck Pain and Their Relationship to the Neck Disability Index.

25. Local Synthesis of Estradiol in the Rostral Ventromedial Medulla Protects against Widespread Muscle Pain in Male Mice.

26. Effects of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation on pain, function, and descending inhibition in people with non-specific chronic low-back pain: a study protocol for a randomized crossover trial.

27. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor contributes to activity-induced muscle pain in male but not female mice.

28. Influence of routine exercise on the peripheral immune system to prevent and alleviate pain.

29. Translating Outcomes from the Clinical Setting to Preclinical Models: Chronic Pain and Functionality in Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain.

30. Using TENS for Pain Control: Update on the State of the Evidence.

31. The Influence of Opioids on Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation Effects in Women With Fibromyalgia.

32. Multi-Site Observational Study to Assess Biomarkers for Susceptibility or Resilience to Chronic Pain: The Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures (A2CPS) Study Protocol.

33. Development of a national pain management competency profile to guide entry-level physiotherapy education in Canada.

34. Kinesiophobia Severity Categories and Clinically Meaningful Symptom Change in Persons With Achilles Tendinopathy in a Cross-Sectional Study: Implications for Assessment and Willingness to Exercise.

35. Test-Retest Reliability and Responsiveness of PROMIS Sleep Short Forms Within an RCT in Women With Fibromyalgia.

38. Repeated Injections of Low-Dose Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) in Healthy Humans Maintain Muscle Pain and Facilitate Ischemic Contraction-Evoked Pain.

39. Regular physical activity reduces the percentage of spinally projecting neurons that express mu-opioid receptors from the rostral ventromedial medulla in mice.

40. Effect of Pain Education and Exercise on Pain and Function in Chronic Achilles Tendinopathy: Protocol for a Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Randomized Trial.

41. Mechanism of exercise-induced analgesia: what we can learn from physically active animals.

42. Persistent pain induces mood problems and memory loss by the involvement of cytokines, growth factors, and supraspinal glial cells.

43. ASICs are required for immediate exercise-induced muscle pain and are downregulated in sensory neurons by exercise training.

44. Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation Reduces Movement-Evoked Pain and Fatigue: A Randomized, Controlled Trial.

45. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, acupuncture, and spinal cord stimulation on neuropathic, inflammatory and, non-inflammatory pain in rat models.

46. Author Response.

47. Physical activity is related to function and fatigue but not pain in women with fibromyalgia: baseline analyses from the Fibromyalgia Activity Study with TENS (FAST).

48. Transition to chronic pain: opportunities for novel therapeutics.

49. A Mechanism-Based Approach to Physical Therapist Management of Pain.

50. Regular physical activity prevents development of chronic muscle pain through modulation of supraspinal opioid and serotonergic mechanisms.

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