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Phillip J. Quartana
Researcher at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
Publications - 67
Citations - 3299
Phillip J. Quartana is an academic researcher from Walter Reed Army Institute of Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chronic pain & Anger. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 59 publications receiving 2749 citations. Previous affiliations of Phillip J. Quartana include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science.
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Journal ArticleDOI
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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Chronic pain and opioid use in US soldiers after combat deployment.
Robin L. Toblin,Phillip J. Quartana,Lyndon A. Riviere,Kristina Clarke Walper,Charles W. Hoge +4 more
TL;DR: To the authors' knowledge, this is the first study to assess chronic pain prevalence and opioid use in a non– treatment-seeking, active duty infantry population following deployment.
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Threat-Related Attention Bias Variability and Posttraumatic Stress.
Reut Naim,Rany Abend,Ilan Wald,Sharon Eldar,Ofir Levi,Eyal Fruchter,Karen Ginat,Pinchas Halpern,Maurice L. Sipos,Amy B. Adler,Paul D. Bliese,Phillip J. Quartana,Daniel S. Pine,Yair Bar-Haim +13 more
TL;DR: Findings in this study carry possibilities for using attention bias variability as a specific cognitive marker of PTSD and for tailoring protocols for attention bias modification for this disorder.
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Mechanisms by which sleep disturbance contributes to osteoarthritis pain: A conceptual model
TL;DR: A conceptual working model is proposed describing pathways by which sleep disturbance interacts directly with central pain processing mechanisms and inflammatory processes, and indirectly with mood and physical functioning to augment clinical OA pain.
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Anger inhibition and pain: conceptualizations, evidence and new directions
TL;DR: Evidence from studies using new models suggests that actually inhibiting anger expression during a provocative event may increase perceived pain at a later time, and one model of anger inhibition and pain is presented that adopts elements of Wegner’s ironic process theory of thought suppression.