Episodes
Published 09/01/23
This 16th episode of The Pain Beat highlights the work of a vibrant consortium of pain researchers working on a project known as Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures (A2CPS). A2CPS is focused on the identification of biomarkers to predict which patients will transition from acute to chronic pain, and which patients living with chronic pain can improve their quality of life with management (see related PRF news story). The Pain Beat invited several Primary Investigators from A2CPS to talk about...
Published 09/01/23
This 15th episode of The Pain Beat is the third and final of a three-part series discussing the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine – awarded to David Julius, University of California, San Francisco, USA and Ardem Patapoutian, Scripps Research, California, USA – for their work on molecules important for somatosensation (see PRF related interview here, PRF related news story here, part one of this series here, and part two of this series here). In this episode, The Pain Beat spoke...
Published 11/10/22
This 14th episode of The Pain Beat is the second of a three-part series discussing the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine – awarded to David Julius, University of California, San Francisco, USA and Ardem Patapoutian, Scripps Research, California, USA – for their work on molecules important for somatosensation (see PRF related interview here, PRF related news story here, and part one of this series here). In this episode, The Pain Beat spoke with Nobel Prize laureate Ardem...
Published 09/14/22
This 13th episode of The Pain Beat is the first of a three-part series discussing the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine – awarded to David Julius, University of California, San Francisco, USA and Ardem Patapoutian, Scripps Research, California, USA – for their work on molecules important for somatosensation (see PRF related interview here, and PRF related news story here). In this episode, The Pain Beat spoke with Nobel Prize laureate David Julius and Michael Caterina, Johns...
Published 08/19/22
The twelfth episode of The Pain Beat is dedicated to Stephen McMahon, PhD, FMedSci (1954-2021). Stephen, affectionately known as “Mac,” was a world class pain researcher, lecturer, and inspiration to many. Our podcast guests pay homage to “Mac” with stories that illustrate his influence on the pain research field, and those in it. He will be remembered not only for his seminal contributions to our understanding of pain, but also for his generous and enthusiastic personal spirit which has left...
Published 05/27/22
For its eleventh episode, The Pain Beat brought together experts to discuss the biological evolution of nociceptors, their subtypes, and plasticity as part of the Gulf Coast Consortium’s #Pain2021 Webinar Series. These experts study nociceptors across a variety of animal models, including Drosophila, C. elegans, cephalopods, rodents, and humans. The discussion focused on how an evolutionary perspective brings novel insights into the role and function of nociceptors and if, why, and how...
Published 04/14/22
For its tenth episode, The Pain Beat brought together guests from a variety of career stages to share their experiences conducting pain and pain-related research during the COVID-19 pandemic. Their discussion highlighted unique and shared experiences, how research priorities and strategies shifted in response to the pandemic, as well as ways in which colleagues found and offered support.     Podcast participants include: Theanne Griffith, PhD, University of California, Davis, US Kelly...
Published 03/10/22
For its ninth episode, The Pain Beat brought together experts in how pain is measured clinically and experimentally. This group discussed what is the difference between pain and nociception, why organisms experience pain and whether pain can be objectively measured since it is a subjective experience. Additionally, the group explored why researchers have relied on the measurement of nociception for so long and offer paths forward for the research community including a discussion of new...
Published 12/07/21
For its eighth episode, The Pain Beat gathered together a group of pain researchers with expertise in the study of sex differences in pain. The group discussed their own discoveries of sex differences in pain in the course of their research, why pain investigators should pay attention to sex differences and how they should go about examining them, and much more.
Published 12/07/21
This Pain Beat podcast discusses pain neuroimaging studies in people, with a focus on how studies of expectation and the placebo effect have advanced our understanding in this area. Podcast participants include: --Christian Büchel, MD, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany --Irene Tracey, DPhil, University of Oxford, UK --Tor Wager, PhD, Dartmouth College, Hanover, US --Howard Fields, MD, PhD, University of California San Francisco, US (moderator)
Published 05/26/21
For the sixth episode, The Pain Beat gathered together an international group of pain researchers, science communicators and civic science advocates to discuss what effective, empathic and inclusive science communication looks like.
Published 02/21/21
In the fifth episode of The Pain Beat, researchers discuss how the mammalian nervous system encodes sensory modalities related to touch, pain and temperature. Are there labeled lines? Is there population coding? Do the mechanisms differ by location – the brain, spinal cord or periphery?
Published 01/11/21
The Pain Beat gathered together a group of pain researchers via Zoom to discuss the use of human tissue in pain research and prospects for clinical translation of new knowledge emerging from this approach.
Published 10/25/20
A group of pain researchers gather to discuss ideas and issues related to the transition from acute to chronic pain.
Published 09/17/20
In the second episode of The Pain Beat, leading pain researchers discuss whether optogenetics and chemogenetics are feasible approaches to pain treatment, and if so, how effective they might be.
Published 07/14/20
This podcast discusses the following question: What Biological Levels Should Be Targeted to Produce the Most Effective Pain Therapies: Molecules? Cells? Circuits? Or Systems? Hosted by the IASP Pain Research Forum (https://www.painresearchforum.org).
Published 06/14/20