Really brilliant! Things have changed some since back in my days of school. We used to suppose inhibitory feedback from touch acted upon a gate at the thalamus.
Thanks a lot! Please could you explain why you get sympathetic response (tachycardia etc with pain) when an Anaesthetised or unanaesthetitsed patient feels pain? Many thanks
Hi, thanks for the video. I have a question regarding hypnoanalgesia. Given that Naloxone does not block the reduction of pain seen in hypnoanalgesia and that Moret et al. 1991 concluded that hypnoanalgesia is not primarily mediated by the opiate endorphin system it seems unlikely at hypnosis has any effect on the dorsal horn interneuron inhibition of second order nociceptive afferents. Seems that in order to understand the effects of hypnoanalgesia, we need to get out of the spinal cord and up into consciousness and higher levels in the brain. I would be interested in your thoughts. Kind regards, Bernie Whitaker
I've watched so many videos on this and yours is the only one I've been able to fully understand so thank you!
Absolutely brilliant and helpful and also easy to understand. Thank you so much.
Really brilliant! Things have changed some since back in my days of school. We used to suppose inhibitory feedback from touch acted upon a gate at the thalamus.
realy outstanding...
It helps me much than others.
Thank you so much💓
brilliant video here, well explained
Hi
Thank you so much. You made this topic very clear for me.
Oh my God .. brilliant.. thank you so much!
unbelievable explanation!!
Thanks a lot! Please could you explain why you get sympathetic response (tachycardia etc with pain) when an Anaesthetised or unanaesthetitsed patient feels pain? Many thanks
Thanks a lot.
Great video sir , much obliged
Hi, thanks for the video. I have a question regarding hypnoanalgesia. Given that Naloxone does not block the reduction of pain seen in hypnoanalgesia and that Moret et al. 1991 concluded that hypnoanalgesia is not primarily mediated by the opiate endorphin system it seems unlikely at hypnosis has any effect on the dorsal horn interneuron inhibition of second order nociceptive afferents. Seems that in order to understand the effects of hypnoanalgesia, we need to get out of the spinal cord and up into consciousness and higher levels in the brain. I would be interested in your thoughts. Kind regards, Bernie Whitaker
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!!!!
very nice.
thank you!
Verty large introduction , at 8:34 starts to talk about the matter . Anyway , good video .
thank you very useful