Reduced thermal hyperalgesia and enhanced peripheral nerve injury after hind paw inflammation in mice lacking the serotonin-transporter

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10.1016/j.ejpain.2007.11.009

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Palm, Florian, Rainald Mössner, Yong Chen, Lan He, Manfred Gerlach, Stefan Bischofs, Peter Riederer, Klaus‐Peter Lesch, et al. (2008). Reduced thermal hyperalgesia and enhanced peripheral nerve injury after hind paw inflammation in mice lacking the serotonin-transporter. European Journal of Pain, 12(6). pp. 790–797. 10.1016/j.ejpain.2007.11.009 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13659.

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Chen

Yong Chen

Associate Professor in Neurology

Dr. Yong Chen is an Associate Professor of Neurology at the Duke University School of Medicine.  He is also affiliated with Duke Anesthesiology-Center for Translational Pain Medicine (CTPM) and Duke-Pathology.

The Chen lab mainly studies sensory neurobiology of pain and itch, with a focus on TRP ion channels and neural circuits. The main objective of our lab is to identify molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying chronic pain and chronic-disease associated itch, using a combination of animal behavioral, genetic, molecular and cellular, advanced imaging, viral, and optogenetic approaches.  There are three major research areas in the lab: craniofacial pain, arthritis pain and joint function, and systemic-disease associated itch.


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