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151. Core competencies for pain management: results of an interprofessional consensus summit.

152. Effect of transcutaneous electrical stimulation on nociception and edema induced by peripheral serotonin.

153. Effects of the carrier frequency of interferential current on pain modulation in patients with chronic nonspecific low back pain: a protocol of a randomised controlled trial.

154. Acid-sensing ion channel 3 deficiency increases inflammation but decreases pain behavior in murine arthritis.

155. Spinal cord stimulation reduces hypersensitivity through activation of opioid receptors in a frequency-dependent manner.

156. Regular physical activity prevents development of chronic pain and activation of central neurons.

158. Responses of glomus cells to hypoxia and acidosis are uncoupled, reciprocal and linked to ASIC3 expression: selectivity of chemosensory transduction.

159. Animal models of fibromyalgia.

160. Predictors of postoperative movement and resting pain following total knee replacement.

161. Increasing intensity of TENS prevents analgesic tolerance in rats.

162. TRPV1 is important for mechanical and heat sensitivity in uninjured animals and development of heat hypersensitivity after muscle inflammation.

163. Effects of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation on pain, pain sensitivity, and function in people with knee osteoarthritis: a randomized controlled trial.

164. Induction of chronic non-inflammatory widespread pain increases cardiac sympathetic modulation in rats.

165. Exercise-induced pain requires NMDA receptor activation in the medullary raphe nuclei.

166. ASICs Do Not Play a Role in Maintaining Hyperalgesia Induced by Repeated Intramuscular Acid Injections.

167. Selective targeting of ASIC3 using artificial miRNAs inhibits primary and secondary hyperalgesia after muscle inflammation.

168. Blockade of opioid receptors in the medullary reticularis nucleus dorsalis, but not the rostral ventromedial medulla, prevents analgesia produced by diffuse noxious inhibitory control in rats with muscle inflammation.

169. Adjusting pulse amplitude during transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) application produces greater hypoalgesia.

170. An investigation of the development of analgesic tolerance to TENS in humans.

171. Increased response of muscle sensory neurons to decreases in pH after muscle inflammation.

172. Changes in expression of NMDA-NR1 receptor subunits in the rostral ventromedial medulla modulate pain behaviors.

173. Acid-sensing ion channel 3 expressed in type B synoviocytes and chondrocytes modulates hyaluronan expression and release.

174. Activation of NMDA receptors in the brainstem, rostral ventromedial medulla, and nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis mediates mechanical hyperalgesia produced by repeated intramuscular injections of acidic saline in rats.

175. A new transient sham TENS device allows for investigator blinding while delivering a true placebo treatment.

176. ASIC1 and ASIC3 play different roles in the development of Hyperalgesia after inflammatory muscle injury.

177. Plasma endogenous enkephalin levels in early systemic sclerosis: clinical and laboratory associations.

178. Fatiguing exercise enhances hyperalgesia to muscle inflammation.

179. Cholecystokinin receptors mediate tolerance to the analgesic effect of TENS in arthritic rats.

180. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation at both high and low frequencies activates ventrolateral periaqueductal grey to decrease mechanical hyperalgesia in arthritic rats.

182. Acid-sensing ion channels: A new target for pain and CNS diseases.

183. Increased glutamate and decreased glycine release in the rostral ventromedial medulla during induction of a pre-clinical model of chronic widespread muscle pain.

184. An investigation of the hypoalgesic effects of TENS delivered by a glove electrode.

185. Invited commentary.

186. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for acute pain.

187. Increased c-fos immunoreactivity in the spinal cord and brain following spinal cord stimulation is frequency-dependent.

188. Acid-sensing ion channel 3 expression in mouse knee joint afferents and effects of carrageenan-induced arthritis.

189. Experimental muscle pain impairs descending inhibition.

190. Effectiveness of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation for treatment of hyperalgesia and pain.

191. Acidic buffer induced muscle pain evokes referred pain and mechanical hyperalgesia in humans.

192. Central mechanisms in the maintenance of chronic widespread noninflammatory muscle pain.

193. Low frequencies, but not high frequencies of bi-polar spinal cord stimulation reduce cutaneous and muscle hyperalgesia induced by nerve injury.

194. Massage reduces pain perception and hyperalgesia in experimental muscle pain: a randomized, controlled trial.

195. Role of ASIC3 in the primary and secondary hyperalgesia produced by joint inflammation in mice.

196. Hypoalgesic effect of the transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation following inguinal herniorrhaphy: a randomized, controlled trial.

197. Descending facilitatory pathways from the RVM initiate and maintain bilateral hyperalgesia after muscle insult.

198. Modulation between high- and low-frequency transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation delays the development of analgesic tolerance in arthritic rats.

199. Enhanced muscle fatigue occurs in male but not female ASIC3-/- mice.

200. Blockade of NMDA receptors prevents analgesic tolerance to repeated transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) in rats.

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