Results 231 to 240 of about 16,197 (282)
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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
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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.
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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.
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Atypical Facial Pain/Persistent Idiopathic Facial Pain
2020Atypical facial pain (AFP) or persistent idiopathic facial pain (PIFP) is a chronic pain syndrome characterized by persistent facial and/or oral pain not clearly attributable to other facial or dental pathology. The precise incidence and prevalence of PIFP are unknown; however, it is believed to be a rare disease even among the idiopathic chronic pain ...
Brady Still, Tariq Malik
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Neurologia i Neurochirurgia Polska, 1995
<p>The term "atypical facial pain" describes chronic pain syndrome involving the face. The syndrome consists of continuous mostly burning bouts of pain, localized in one half of the face. The authors review the literature of the topic, discuss also the historical aspects of terminology.
A, Prusiński, M, Lewańska
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<p>The term "atypical facial pain" describes chronic pain syndrome involving the face. The syndrome consists of continuous mostly burning bouts of pain, localized in one half of the face. The authors review the literature of the topic, discuss also the historical aspects of terminology.
A, Prusiński, M, Lewańska
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Atypical Facial Pain: A Reappraisal
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1985SYNOPSIS Atypical facial pain is a syndrome of chronic facial pain affecting mainly young women who are often emotionally disturbed. Current opinion favors a psychogenic cause for it, but no causal relationship has been established: not all those affected are emotionally disturbed and no single psychiatric disorder predominates among ...
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Atypical facial pain: A retrospective study
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1985Among the most challenging patients seen for evaluation by a health care practitioner are those suffering from the atypical facial pain syndrome. They have almost inevitably been subjected to extensive treatment which either has had no effect on the symptoms or has aggravated them.
D, Mock, W, Frydman, A S, Gordon
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Atypical Facial Pain and Depression
British Journal of Psychiatry, 1966Prolonged facial pain has long been a source of frustration to the medical profession, both from the diagnostic and therapeutic standpoints. The difficulty arises not in the “typical” facial pain syndromes such as trigeminal neuralgia, migrainous neuralgia or post-herpetic neuralgia, nor with pain due to diseases of the teeth, throat, nose, eyes and ...
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Atypical Facial Pain and Orbital Cancer
Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1985A patient complaining of facial pain was found to have primary squamous cell cancer of the orbit. The treatment included surgery and radiotherapy. The patient having this extremely rare disease has been followed up for seven years with no evidence of recurrence.
T, Ruff, A, Lenis, J A, Diaz
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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 ...
R W, Lam, R A, Remick
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