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个人简介
Research Interests
Temporomandibular Disorders (TMDs) and persistent (chronic) orofacial pain
Quality of life
Professional and Patients' experiences or perceptions of care
Current Work
My current research programme addresses both translational gaps and consists of two broad work streams:
1) Acute inflammatory dental pain: enabling care and reducing chronification:
This work stream seeks to: i) ascertain the reasons behind delayed attendance for acute inflammatory dental pain and intervene in order to enable and facilitate patients into earlier and definitive care thereby reducing the size of the cohort experiencing acute dental pain (for a prolonged duration) and thereby reducing the risk of chronification to “phantom tooth pain” (Atypical Odontalgia, Persistant Dentoalveolar Pain [PDAP]); ii) unpick the mechanisms behind the transition from acute dental to chronic "phantom" pain in order to be able to understand the therapeutic targets available at the time of treatment so we can develop more effective treatments to prevent the transition.
Collaborators in this work stream include individuals from: Newcastle's Institutes of Cellular Medicine and Neuroscience, University of Washington, and the Orofacial Pain research team at Minnesota University
2) Persistent orofacial pain care pathways and management
This varied work stream builds on the data generated from the NIHR funded DEEP study (http://research.ncl.ac.uk/deepstudy) on care pathways in persistent orofacial pain and seeks to address many of the initial problems patients and health care professionals face at the first point of contact with healthcare:
- Diagnosis of Temporomandibular Disorders (TMD) and PDAP
- Stratification of care in persistent orofacial pain
- Gold standard self-management of TMD?
- Diet and nutrition in TMD
- Cognition's role in TMD pain
- Topical neuromodulation of persistent neuropathic orofacial pain for example some types of PDAP.
Collaborators in this work stream include individuals from: Newcastle's Institute of Neuroscience, King's College, University of Sheffield, University of Zurich, University of Ghent, Minnesota University.
Temporomandibular Disorders (TMDs) and persistent (chronic) orofacial pain
Quality of life
Professional and Patients' experiences or perceptions of care
Current Work
My current research programme addresses both translational gaps and consists of two broad work streams:
1) Acute inflammatory dental pain: enabling care and reducing chronification:
This work stream seeks to: i) ascertain the reasons behind delayed attendance for acute inflammatory dental pain and intervene in order to enable and facilitate patients into earlier and definitive care thereby reducing the size of the cohort experiencing acute dental pain (for a prolonged duration) and thereby reducing the risk of chronification to “phantom tooth pain” (Atypical Odontalgia, Persistant Dentoalveolar Pain [PDAP]); ii) unpick the mechanisms behind the transition from acute dental to chronic "phantom" pain in order to be able to understand the therapeutic targets available at the time of treatment so we can develop more effective treatments to prevent the transition.
Collaborators in this work stream include individuals from: Newcastle's Institutes of Cellular Medicine and Neuroscience, University of Washington, and the Orofacial Pain research team at Minnesota University
2) Persistent orofacial pain care pathways and management
This varied work stream builds on the data generated from the NIHR funded DEEP study (http://research.ncl.ac.uk/deepstudy) on care pathways in persistent orofacial pain and seeks to address many of the initial problems patients and health care professionals face at the first point of contact with healthcare:
- Diagnosis of Temporomandibular Disorders (TMD) and PDAP
- Stratification of care in persistent orofacial pain
- Gold standard self-management of TMD?
- Diet and nutrition in TMD
- Cognition's role in TMD pain
- Topical neuromodulation of persistent neuropathic orofacial pain for example some types of PDAP.
Collaborators in this work stream include individuals from: Newcastle's Institute of Neuroscience, King's College, University of Sheffield, University of Zurich, University of Ghent, Minnesota University.
研究兴趣
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Journal of dentistry (2024): 104896-104896
Nontawat Chuinsiri, Nannapat Siraboriphantakul, Luke Kendall,Polina Yarova, Christopher J Nile,Bing Song,Ilona Obara,Justin Durham,Vsevolod Telezhkin
British journal of pharmacology (2024)
INTERNATIONAL ENDODONTIC JOURNALno. 4 (2024): 416-430
Nontawat Chuinsiri, Nannapat Siraboriphantakul, Luke Kendall,Polina Yarova, Christopher J. Nile,Bing Song,Ilona Obara,Justin Durham,Vsevolod Telezhkin
British Journal of Pharmacology (2024)
Chris Penlington,Julia Palmer, Daniela Martinez-Telchi,Justin Durham, Tobar Lahosa Valentine, Maria Jose Casals,Juan Fernando Oyarzo
Ronlada Porntirit,Phanomporn Vanichanon,Prangtip Potewiratnanond,Justin Durham, Chayanit Chaweewannakorn
International Dental Journal (2024)
JOURNAL OF ORAL REHABILITATIONno. 1 (2024): 29-58
Nontawat Chuinsiri, Nannapat Siraboriphantakul, Luke Kendall,Polina Yarova,Christopher J. Nile,Bing Song,Ilona Obara,Justin Durham,Vsevolod Telezhkin
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) (2023)
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