Why look in the brain for answers to temporomandibular disorder pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - karger.com
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

Why look in the brain for answers to temporomandibular disorder pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - pure.johnshopkins.edu
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

Why look in the brain for answers to temporomandibular disorder pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells, Tissues, Organs, 2005 - europepmc.org
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

Why look in the brain for answers to temporomandibular disorder pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells, tissues, organs, 2005 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

[PDF][PDF] Why Look in the Brain for Answers to Temporomandibular Disorder Pain?

E Sarlania, JD Greenspanb - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - researchgate.net
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

[引用][C] Why Look in the Brain for Answers to Temporomandibular Disorder Pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - cir.nii.ac.jp

Why Look in the Brain for Answers to Temporomandibular Disorder Pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - search.proquest.com
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

Why Look in the Brain for Answers to Temporomandibular Disorder Pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - search.ebscohost.com
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

Why Look in the Brain for Answers to Temporomandibular Disorder Pain?

E Sarlani, JD Greenspan - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - karger.com
Temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients often exhibit widespread clinical pain, as well
as greater sensitivity to experimental pain than pain-free controls, suggesting a role of …

[引用][C] Why look in the brain for answers to temporomandibular disorder pain?

E SARLANI - Cells Tissues Organs, 2005 - cir.nii.ac.jp