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- Q18343535 subject Q6535795.
- Q18343535 abstract "The gate control theory of pain asserts that non-painful input closes the "gates" to painful input, which prevents pain sensation from traveling to the central nervous system. Therefore, stimulation by non-noxious input is able to suppress pain. First proposed in 1965 by Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall, the theory offers a physiological explanation for the previously observed effect of psychology on pain perception. Combining early concepts derived from the specificity theory and the peripheral pattern theory, the gate control theory is considered to be one of the most influential theories of pain because it provided a neural basis which reconciled the specificity and pattern theories and ultimately revolutionized pain research.Although there are some important observations which the gate control theory cannot explain adequately, it remains the only theory of pain that most accurately accounts for the physical and psychological aspects of pain perception.Willem Noordenbos (1910–1990), a Dutch researcher at the University of Amsterdam, was the first one to propose a model with an interaction between small (unmyelinated) and thick (myelinated) fibers in 1959. The fast (myelinated) fibers block the slow (unmyelinated) fibers, "fast blocks slow".".
- Q18343535 thumbnail Gate_control_no_A.svg?width=300.
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- Q18343535 wikiPageWikiLink Q6535795.
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- Q18343535 comment "The gate control theory of pain asserts that non-painful input closes the "gates" to painful input, which prevents pain sensation from traveling to the central nervous system. Therefore, stimulation by non-noxious input is able to suppress pain. First proposed in 1965 by Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall, the theory offers a physiological explanation for the previously observed effect of psychology on pain perception.".
- Q18343535 label "Gate control theory".
- Q18343535 depiction Gate_control_no_A.svg.