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Henry A. Gremillion
Researcher at Louisiana State University
Publications - 43
Citations - 1440
Henry A. Gremillion is an academic researcher from Louisiana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Orofacial pain & Pain catastrophizing. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 43 publications receiving 1325 citations. Previous affiliations of Henry A. Gremillion include Memorial Hospital of South Bend & University of Florida.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Findings and Pain Symptoms as Potential Risk Factors for Chronic TMD: Descriptive Data and Empirically Identified Domains from the OPPERA Case-Control Study
Richard Ohrbach,Roger B. Fillingim,Flora Mulkey,Yoly Gonzalez,Sharon M. Gordon,Henry A. Gremillion,Pei Feng Lim,Margarete C. Ribeiro-Dasilva,Joel D. Greenspan,Charles Knott,William Maixner,Gary D. Slade +11 more
TL;DR: Clinical findings from OPPERA's baseline case-control study indicate significant differences between chronic TMD cases and controls with respect to trauma history, parafunction, other pain disorders, health status, and clinical examination data.
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Negative mood mediates the effect of poor sleep on pain among chronic pain patients.
Erin M. O'Brien,Lori B. Waxenberg,James W. Atchison,Henry A. Gremillion,Roland Staud,Christina S. McCrae,Michael E. Robinson +6 more
TL;DR: Analysis of the relationship among sleep disturbance, negative mood, and pain within a large sample of chronic pain patients suggests that addressing negative mood directly, or by addressing sleep disturbances in chronicPain patients, may have a beneficial impact on patients' pain.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Effects of Depression and Chronic Pain on Psychosocial and Physical Functioning
TL;DR: Results of path analyses indicated that both somatic and cognitive symptoms of depression significantly correlate with psychosocial functioning even after controlling for the effects of pain level, trait anxiety, and trait anger.
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Intraindividual Variability in Daily Sleep and Pain Ratings Among Chronic Pain Patients: Bidirectional Association and the Role of Negative Mood
Erin M. O'Brien,Lori B. Waxenberg,James W. Atchison,Henry A. Gremillion,Roland Staud,Christina S. McCrae,Michael E. Robinson +6 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that addressing sleep is important in the treatment of individuals with chronic pain, such that a night of poor sleep is followed by increased pain ratings the following day and a day of increased pain was followed by a nightof poor sleep.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sleep Disturbance in Orofacial Pain Patients: Pain-Related or Emotional Distress?
Joseph L. Riley,Melvin B. Benson,Henry A. Gremillion,Cynthia D. Myers,Michael E. Robinson,Charles L. Smith,Lori B. Waxenberg +6 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that pain, rather than sleep disturbance, increases negative affect across time, whereas negative affect is more a cause of concurrent reduced sleep quality than is pain is supported.