Y. Güereca
University of Tulsa
26 Papers
44 Citations
Y. Güereca is an academic researcher from University of Tulsa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nociceptive flexion reflex & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 24 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
The Influence of Placebo Analgesia Manipulations on Pain Report, the Nociceptive Flexion Reflex, and Autonomic Responses to Pain.
TL;DR: E+C manipulations produce the strongest analgesia and have a complex influence on spinal nociception involving both inhibitory and facilitatory processes, which suggests a complex modulation of spinal neurons by placebo manipulations.
22
The Effect of Pain Catastrophizing on Endogenous Inhibition of Pain and Spinal Nociception in Native Americans: Results From the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk
Tyler A. Toledo,Bethany L. Kuhn,M. Payne,M. Payne,E. Lannon,Shreela Palit,Shreela Palit,C. Sturycz,Natalie Hellman,Y. Güereca,Mara J Demuth,Felicitas A. Huber,J. Shadlow,Jamie L. Rhudy +13 more
TL;DR: Whether the catastrophizing-CPM relationship might contribute to the higher risk of chronic pain in Native Americans (NAs) is determined to determine.
16
Anger Inhibition and Pain Modulation.
Tyler A. Toledo,Natalie Hellman,E. Lannon,C. Sturycz,Bethany L. Kuhn,M. Payne,Shreela Palit,Y. Güereca,J. Shadlow,Jamie L. Rhudy +9 more
TL;DR: These findings support the cognitive resource hypothesis and suggest that overuse of emotional inhibition in high anger-in individuals could contribute to cognitive resource deficits that in turn contribute to pain risk.
13
Behavioral Inhibition and Behavioral Activation are Related to Habituation of Nociceptive Flexion Reflex, but Not Pain Ratings.
TL;DR: Preliminary experimental support for Jensen and colleagues' 2-factor model of pain experience is provided and a role for approach and avoidance motivations in descending modulation of NFR is implicate.
12
(232) Assessing Chronic Pain Onset in Native Americans: Follow-Up Results from the Oklahoma Study of Native American Pain Risk (OK-SNAP)
Erin N Ross,Felicitas A. Huber,Bethany L. Kuhn,E. Lannon,C. Sturycz,M. Payne,Natalie Hellman,Tyler A. Toledo,Y. Güereca,Shreela Palit,Mara J Demuth,J. Shadlow,Jamie L. Rhudy +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined whether healthy, pain-free NAs are more likely to develop chronic pain after controlling for other health variables and found that race was the only significant predictor (OR=3.015, 95% CI: 1.309, 6.945).
9