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Dive into the research topics where Rhonda Amsel is active.

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Featured researches published by Rhonda Amsel.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2009

Contributions of the basal ganglia and functionally related brain structures to motor learning

Julien Doyon; Pierre Bellec; Rhonda Amsel; Virginia B. Penhune; Oury Monchi; Julie Carrier; Stéphane Lehéricy; Habib Benali

This review discusses the cerebral plasticity, and the role of the cortico-striatal system in particular, observed as one is learning or planning to execute a newly learned motor behavior up to when the skill is consolidated or has become highly automatized. A special emphasis is given to imaging work describing the neural substrate mediating motor sequence learning and motor adaptation paradigms. These results are then put into a plausible neurobiological model of motor skill learning, which proposes an integrated view of the brain plasticity mediating this form of memory at different stages of the acquisition process.


Pain | 2001

A randomized comparison of group cognitive--behavioral therapy, surface electromyographic biofeedback, and vestibulectomy in the treatment of dyspareunia resulting from vulvar vestibulitis.

Sophie Bergeron; Yitzchak M. Binik; Samir Khalifé; Kelly Pagidas; Howard I. Glazer; Marta Meana; Rhonda Amsel

&NA; This study compared group cognitive–behavioral therapy (12‐week trial), surface electromyographic biofeedback (12‐week trial), and vestibulectomy in the treatment of dyspareunia resulting from vulvar vestibulitis. Subjects were 78 women randomly assigned to one of three treatment conditions and assessed at pretreatment, posttreatment and 6‐month follow‐up via gynecological examinations, structured interviews and standard questionnaires pertaining to pain (Pain Rating Index and Sensory scale of the McGill Pain Questionnaire, vestibular pain index, pain during intercourse), sexual function (Sexual History Form, frequency of intercourse, Information subscale of the Derogatis Sexual Functioning Inventory), and psychological adjustment (Brief Symptom Inventory). As compared with pretreatment, study completers of all treatment groups reported statistically significant reductions on pain measures at posttreatment and 6‐month follow‐up, although the vestibulectomy group was significantly more successful than the two other groups. However, the apparent superiority of vestibulectomy needs to be interpreted with caution since seven women who had been assigned to this condition did not go ahead with the intervention. All three groups significantly improved on measures of psychological adjustment and sexual function from pretreatment to 6‐month follow‐up. Intent‐to‐treat analysis supported the general pattern of results of analysis by‐treatment‐received. Findings suggest that women with dyspareunia can benefit from both medical and behavioral interventions.


Pain | 2002

Vestibular tactile and pain thresholds in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome.

Caroline F. Pukall; Yitzchak M. Binik; Samir Khalifé; Rhonda Amsel; Frances V. Abbott

&NA; Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) is a common cause of dyspareunia in pre‐menopausal women. Little is known about sensory function in the vulvar vestibule, despite Kinseys assertion that it is important for sexual sensation. We examined punctate tactile and pain thresholds to modified von Frey filaments in the genital region of women with VVS and age‐ and contraceptive‐matched pain‐free controls. Women with VVS had lower tactile and pain thresholds around the vulvar vestibule and on the labium minus than controls, and these results were reliable over time. Women with VVS also had lower tactile, punctate pain, and pressure‐pain tolerance over the deltoid muscle on the upper arm, suggesting that generalized systemic hypersensitivity may contribute to VVS in some women. In testing tactile thresholds, 20% of trials were blank, and there was no group difference in the false positive rate, indicating that response bias cannot account for the lower thresholds. Women with VVS reported significantly more catastrophizing thoughts related to intercourse pain, but there was no difference between groups in catastrophizing for unrelated pains. Pain intensity ratings for stimuli above the pain threshold increased in a parallel fashion with log stimulus intensity in both groups, but the ratings of distress were substantially greater in the VVS group than in controls at equivalent levels of pain intensity. The data imply that VVS may reflect a specific pathological process in the vestibular region, superimposed on systemic hypersensitivity to tactile and pain stimuli.


Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy | 2003

Etiological Correlates of Vaginismus: Sexual and Physical Abuse, Sexual Knowledge, Sexual Self-Schema, and Relationship Adjustment

Elke D. Reissing; Yitzchak M. Binik; Samir Khalifé; Deborah Cohen; Rhonda Amsel

This study investigated the role of sexual and physical abuse, sexual self-schema, sexual functioning, sexual knowledge, relationship adjustment, and psychological distress in 87 women matched on age, relationship status, and parity and assigned to 3 groups- vaginismus, dyspareunia/vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS), and no pain. More women with vaginismus reported a history of childhood sexual interference, and women in both the vaginismus and VVS groups reported lower levels of sexual functioning and a less positive sexual self-schema. Lack of support for traditionally held hypotheses concerning etiological correlates of vaginismus and the relationship between vaginismus and dyspareunia are discussed.


European Journal of Pain | 2005

When sex hurts, anxiety and fear orient attention towards pain

Kimberley A. Payne; Yitzchak M. Binik; Rhonda Amsel; Samir Khalifé

Hypervigilance for pain‐relevant stimuli has been associated with anxiety, fear of pain and anxiety sensitivity. This attentional bias has been primarily investigated in heterogeneous pain groups or pain‐free controls, but has not been examined in pain conditions where anxiety and fear are likely to play a central role. Due to the intimate and interpersonal nature of genital pain experienced during sexual intercourse, Vulvar Vestibulitis Syndrome (VVS) constitutes an ideal sample in which to investigate the role of cognitive and affective factors in pain perception and maintenance. Seventeen women suffering from VVS and an equal number of age and education matched control women completed an emotional Stroop and memory recall task in addition to a series of questionnaires assessing pain‐hypervigilance, state and trait anxiety, fear of pain, and anxiety sensitivity. VVS sufferers reported hypervigilance for coital pain and also exhibited a selective attentional bias towards pain stimuli on the emotional Stroop task as compared with controls. This effect was predicted by state and trait anxiety and fear of pain. According to these data, treament strategies for VVS should target anxiety and fear in addition to sensory systems.


Pain | 2005

Neural correlates of painful genital touch in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome

Caroline F. Pukall; Irina A. Strigo; Yitzchak M. Binik; Rhonda Amsel; Samir Khalifé; M. Catherine Bushnell

Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) is a common cause of dyspareunia in pre‐menopausal women. Recent evidence points to the importance of the sensory component in VVS, particularly the heightened processing of tactile and pain sensation in the vulvar vestibule. The goal of the present study was to examine the neural basis of heightened sensitivity to touch (i.e. allodynia) in women with VVS. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we compared regions of neural activity in 14 women with VVS and 14 age‐ and contraceptive‐matched control women in response to the application of mild and moderate pressure to the posterior portion of the vulvar vestibule. Intensity and unpleasantness ratings were recorded after each scan; these ratings were significantly higher for women with VVS than controls. All women with VVS described moderate pressure as painful and unpleasant, and 6 of the 14 women with VVS described mild pressure as painful and unpleasant. In contrast, none of the stimuli was painful for control women. Correspondingly, women with VVS showed more significant activations during pressure levels that they found to be either painful or non‐painful than did controls during comparable pressure levels. During pressure described as painful by women with VVS, they had significantly higher activation levels in the insular and frontal cortical regions than did control women. These results suggest that women with VVS exhibit an augmentation of genital sensory processing, which is similar to that observed for a variety of syndromes causing hypersensitivity, including fibromyalgia, idiopathic back pain, irritable bowel syndrome, and neuropathic pain.


Pain | 1986

Trigeminal neuralgia and atypical facial pain: use of the McGill pain questionnaire for discrimination and diagnosis

Ronald Melzack; Christopher F. Terrence; Gerhard H. Fromm; Rhonda Amsel

&NA; Although trigeminal neuralgia and atypical facial pain can usually be distinguished on the basis of several well‐established criteria, differential diagnosis is difficult in a small number of patients. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) is capable of discriminating between the two syndromes and might therefore serve as a diagnostic aid. The MPQ was administered to 74 patients in Pittsburgh and the data were analyzed statistically in Montreal. In an analysis of the data of 53 patients, 91% of the patients were correctly classified on the basis of 7 descriptors. To determine whether the key descriptors were able to predict the diagnosis of a second group, the discriminant function derived from the first analysis was applied to a new group of 21 patients. A correct prediction was made for 90% of the patients. The results indicate that, in difficult cases, the MPQ may be a useful tool to aid in differential diagnosis.


The Journal of Sexual Medicine | 2007

ORIGINAL RESEARCH—PHYSIOLOGY: Thermography as a Physiological Measure of Sexual Arousal in Both Men and Women

Tuuli M. Kukkonen; Yitzchak M. Binik; Rhonda Amsel; Serge Carrier

INTRODUCTION Current physiological measures of sexual arousal are intrusive, hard to compare between genders, and quantitatively problematic. AIM To investigate thermal imaging technology as a means of solving these problems. METHODS Twenty-eight healthy men and 30 healthy women viewed a neutral film clip, after which they were randomly assigned to view one of three other video conditions: (i) neutral (N = 19); (ii) humor (N = 19); and (iii) sexually explicit (N = 20). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Genital and thigh temperatures were continuously recorded using a TSA ImagIR camera. Subjective measures of sexual arousal, humor, and relaxation were assessed using Likert-style questions prior to showing the baseline video and following each film. RESULTS Statistical (Tukey HSD) post-hoc comparisons (P < 0.05) demonstrated that both men and women viewing the sexually arousing video had significantly greater genital temperature (mean = 33.89 degrees C, SD = 1.00) than those in the humor (mean = 32.09 degrees C, SD = 0.93) or neutral (mean = 32.13 degrees C, SD = 1.24) conditions. Men and women in the erotic condition did not differ from each other in time to peak genital temperature (men mean = 664.6 seconds, SD = 164.99; women mean = 743 seconds, SD = 137.87). Furthermore, genital temperature was significantly and highly correlated with subjective ratings of sexual arousal (range r = 0.51-0.68, P < 0.001). There were no significant differences in thigh temperature between groups. CONCLUSION Thermal imaging is a promising technology for the assessment of physiological sexual arousal in both men and women.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1995

Poor sleepers who do not complain of insomnia: Myths and realities about psychological and lifestyle characteristics of older good and poor sleepers

Catherine S. Fichten; Laura Creti; Rhonda Amsel; William Brender; Nettie Weinstein; Eva Libman

Psychological adjustment, lifestyle, and sleep parameters were investigated in 634 older community residents. Participants were divided into three categories: good sleepers, poor sleepers experiencing high distress, and poor sleepers experiencing minimal distress. Results indicate that (1) highly distressed poor sleepers manifested an anxious, depressed, negative cognitive-affective set; (2) many coped well with age related changes in sleep quality—they resembled good sleepers in the relative absence of psychological maladjustment they displayed; (3) the three groups had similar lifestyles, but they differed in the cognitive-affective evaluation of their activities, (4) the insomnia complaint is itself multifaceted and is comprised of three distinct elements—difficulty sleeping, distress, and daytime fatigue; (5) sleep practices (e.g., naps, bedtimes) are not implicated in chronic poor sleep; and (6) many commonly held assumptions about sleep disruptions in older individuals are myth rather than reality. Implications for better understanding and treating insomnia in older individuals are discussed.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 2006

Tender point examination in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome.

Caroline F. Pukall; Murray Baron; Rhonda Amsel; Samir Khalifé; Yitzchak M. Binik

ObjectivesTo examine whether generalized pain sensitivity in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) is increased, suggestive of altered pain processing at the level of the central nervous system, and to investigate pain history and other pain measures in women with VVS. MethodsSixteen women with VVS and 16 age-matched (±3 years) and oral contraceptive status-matched (yes or no) control women participated in this cross-sectional study. The TP examination, typically used in the diagnosis of FMS, consists of the palpation of 9 bilateral nonvulvar areas by a blinded rheumatologist and was the main measure of generalized sensitivity. Pain intensity and unpleasantness rating (0 to 10) were recorded after each palpation. In addition, nonvulvar pain history, pain interference, catastrophizing, and anxiety were assessed via questionnaires. ResultsWomen with VVS had significantly more painful TPs than nonaffected women; they reported significantly higher pain intensity and unpleasantness ratings and displayed more pain behaviors than controls (P<0.05). Furthermore, VVS patients reported having experienced more pain problems and associated interference, they catastrophized more in response to vulvar and nonvulvar pain, and they had higher levels of trait anxiety than controls (P<0.05). DiscussionThese results are consistent with recent findings of generalized sensitivity and heightened responses to pain in women with VVS. These results suggest that the mechanisms involved in VVS may include those that are genital specific in addition to those that are more generalized, and possibly centrally mediated.

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Laura Creti

Jewish General Hospital

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Sally Bailes

Jewish General Hospital

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Dorrie Rizzo

Jewish General Hospital

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