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Psychiatric disorders associated with atypical facial pain
Pain, 1983Atypical facial pain (AFP) patients classically present with a chronic discomfort that is neither anatomic nor dermatomal in distribution. Neuropsychiatric assessment of 68 patients with AFP indicated that 46 (68%) had a specific psychiatric disorder by DSM-III criteria. A wide spectrum of psychiatric disorders was present.
R A, Remick +3 more
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The Journal of the Louisiana State Medical Society : official organ of the Louisiana State Medical Society, 1990
Atypical facial pain was first described by Temple Fay in 1927 as a vascular syndrome of dull, throbbing pain situated deep in the eye and malar region often referred toward the ear, lateral neck, and shoulders. When this syndrome is encountered in medical practice it is often perplexing to the physician and frustrating to the patient.
L S, Brass, R G, Amedee
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Atypical facial pain was first described by Temple Fay in 1927 as a vascular syndrome of dull, throbbing pain situated deep in the eye and malar region often referred toward the ear, lateral neck, and shoulders. When this syndrome is encountered in medical practice it is often perplexing to the physician and frustrating to the patient.
L S, Brass, R G, Amedee
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Vascular Changes in Atypical Facial Pain
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1988SYNOPSIS Thermographic assessment of the facial circulation in nine patients with unilateral atypical facial pain indicated that heat loss was greater from the cheek or orbit on the side of pain in the majority of patients, The unilateral increase in facial blood flow in atypical facial pain is probably a reflex response to activity ...
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Atypical Odontalgia: a Localized Form of Atypical Facial Pain
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1984SYNOPSIS Eight patients with atypical odontalgia, a condition which causes longālasting throbbing pain localized to clinically and radiologically normal teeth and unrelieved by extensive dental treatment, are described. Atypical odontalgia is often accompanied by depression,
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[Chronic orofacial pain; atypical facial pain?].
Nederlands tijdschrift voor tandheelkunde, 2007Difficult to diagnose pain in the orofacial area may be a challenge to the dental practitioner. There still is uncertainty about the taxonomy of chronic orofacial pain, and even more so about its etiology. Treatment of chronic orofacial pain may aim at goals which are set in advance, but also at the underlying pain mechanisms.
G H, Tjakkes, M, van Wijhe
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Trigeminal neuralgia and persistent idiopathic facial pain (atypical facial pain)
Disease-a-Month, 2022Gary W, Jay, Robert L, Barkin
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Atypical Facial Pain: A Review
Seminars in Neurology, 1988S, Solomon, R B, Lipton
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[Therapy for atypical facial pain].
Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine, 2009Atypical facial pain is a pain in the head, neck and the face, without organic causes. It is treated at departments of physical medicine, such as dental, oral and maxillofacial surgery, otolaryngology, cerebral surgery, or head and neck surgery. In primary care, it is considered to be a medically unexplained symptom (MUS), or a somatoform disorder ...
Satoshi, Ishida, Hiroko, Kimura
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Oncologic emergencies and urgencies: A comprehensive review
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Bonnie Gould Rothberg +2 more
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