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Staged cingulotomy and capsulotomy for trigeminal neuropathic pain: A case report. [PDF]
Sozer A +6 more
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Pain Measurement in Infants and Children With and at Risk for Intellectual Disabilities. [PDF]
MacNeil M +4 more
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Spontaneous Internal Carotid Dissection Presenting With Pulsatile Tinnitus and Hearing Loss. [PDF]
Joshi B +4 more
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"Sentinel Oculomotor Nerve Palsy": A Harbinger of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage. [PDF]
Renga V.
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Dental Clinics of North America, 2020
Atypical facial pain (AFP), or persistent idiopathic facial pain, is a chronic and diffuse distribution of facial pain along the territory of the trigeminal nerve. This condition occurs in the absence of any neurologic deficit or any other obvious etiology.
Earl Clarkson, Eunsu Jung
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Atypical facial pain (AFP), or persistent idiopathic facial pain, is a chronic and diffuse distribution of facial pain along the territory of the trigeminal nerve. This condition occurs in the absence of any neurologic deficit or any other obvious etiology.
Earl Clarkson, Eunsu Jung
openaire +3 more sources
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1977
"Atypical facial pain" is the current label for a possibly heterogeneous group of discomforts localized in the lower half of the head and often confused with dental disease. As illustrated in seventeen cases reviewed here, the condition occurs mostly in women, and there are often neurotic problems in addition to the pain.
George W. Paulson, George W. Paulson
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"Atypical facial pain" is the current label for a possibly heterogeneous group of discomforts localized in the lower half of the head and often confused with dental disease. As illustrated in seventeen cases reviewed here, the condition occurs mostly in women, and there are often neurotic problems in addition to the pain.
George W. Paulson, George W. Paulson
openaire +3 more sources
The Lateralization of Atypical Facial Pain
The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1988Various theories have been proposed to explain the reported predominance of left-sided symptoms in patients with conversion disorders, psychogenic symptoms, and chronic pain. In a population of 110 patients with atypical facial pain (AFP), there were no significant differences in the side of pain or lateralization of pain between psychiatric and non ...
Raymond W. Lam, Ronald A. Remick
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