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Satin L. Martin

Researcher at University of Tulsa

Publications -  7
Citations -  166

Satin L. Martin is an academic researcher from University of Tulsa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nociceptive flexion reflex & Nociception. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 148 citations.

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Pain catastrophizing is related to temporal summation of pain but not temporal summation of the nociceptive flexion reflex

TL;DR: Results confirm prior studies that indicate that catastrophizing enhances pain via supraspinal processes rather than spinal processes, and caution is warranted when using pain ratings to infer temporal summation of spinal nociceptive processes.
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Respiration-induced hypoalgesia: exploration of potential mechanisms.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that respiration-induced hypoalgesia does not require gating of spinal nociception or changes in parasympathetic activity, and slow breathing reduced pain relative to normal and fast breathing.
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Do sex hormones influence emotional modulation of pain and nociception in healthy women

TL;DR: Given evidence that a failure to emotionally modulate pain might be a risk factor for chronic pain, low estradiol may promote chronic pain via this mechanism, however, future research is needed to extend these findings to women with disturbances of pain, emotion, and/or sex hormones.
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Using multilevel growth curve modeling to examine emotional modulation of temporal summation of pain (TS-pain) and the nociceptive flexion reflex (TS-NFR)

TL;DR: The results imply that, at least in healthy humans, within‐subject changes in emotions do not promote central sensitization via amplification of temporal summation.
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Affective disturbance associated with premenstrual dysphoric disorder does not disrupt emotional modulation of pain and spinal nociception.

TL;DR: PMDD‐related affective disturbance is not associated with a failure to emotionally modulate pain, suggesting that PMDD does not share this pain phenotype with major depression, insomnia, and fibromyalgia.