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Claudia M. Campbell

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Publications -  143
Citations -  6766

Claudia M. Campbell is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pain catastrophizing & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 115 publications receiving 5426 citations. Previous affiliations of Claudia M. Campbell include University of California, San Francisco & University of Florida.

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Pain catastrophizing: a critical review

TL;DR: This work focuses on the conceptualization of pain catastrophizing, highlighting its conceptual history and potential problem areas, and discusses a number of theoretical mechanisms of action: appraisal theory, attention bias/information processing, communal coping, CNS pain processing mechanisms, psychophysiological pathways and neural pathways.
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Discordance between pain and radiographic severity in knee osteoarthritis: Findings from quantitative sensory testing of central sensitization

TL;DR: The results suggest that central sensitization in knee OA is especially apparent among patients with reports of high levels of clinical pain in the absence of moderate-to-severe radiographic evidence of pathologic changes of knee Oa.
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The A118G single nucleotide polymorphism of the μ-opioid receptor gene (OPRM1) is associated with pressure pain sensitivity in humans

TL;DR: The results support previous contentions that OPRM1 may be a pain-relevant gene and that this genotype may be associated with heat pain perception in a sex-dependent manner; however, replication of these findings is needed.
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Sex-Based Differences in Pain Perception and Treatment

TL;DR: Greater understanding of the factors that commonly and differentially affect the disparity in pain perception, as well as analgesic response, are beginning to illuminate research targets and promising areas of therapeutic intervention for improved pain management.
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Ethnic differences in pain and pain management.

TL;DR: A brief, nonexhaustive review of the recent literature and potential physiological and sociocultural mechanisms underlying ethnic group disparities in pain outcomes is presented.