Results 301 to 310 of about 2,127,102 (356)
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Headache and facial pain

Medicine, 2012
Abstract Headache and facial pain generally become less frequent as people age, but nonetheless remain common problems in the older population, with a one year prevalence of about 50%. Primary headache disorders such as tension-type headache, migraine, or cluster headache may present de novo, or persist into old age; atypical features ...
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Intractable facial pain

British Journal of Oral Surgery, 1979
Case histories of 225 patients with intractable pain attending the Pain Clinic of a large metropolitan teaching hospital were retrospectively analysed. The 29 cases of intractable facial pain were investigated to determine if there were any clinical or historical factors which might indicate intractability and thus speed diagnosis of such cases in ...
B, Speculand   +3 more
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Atypical facial pain

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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Facial Pain Update: Advances in Neurostimulation for the Treatment of Facial Pain

Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2016
Craniofacial pain, including trigeminal neuralgia, trigeminal neuropathic pain, and persistent idiopathic facial pain, is difficult to treat and can have severe implications for suffering in patients afflicted with these conditions. In recent years, clinicians have moved beyond treating solely with pharmacological therapies, which are generally not ...
Rajivan, Maniam   +3 more
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Neurosurgery and facial pain

Hospital Medicine, 2001
This article reviews the diagnosis, differential diagnosis and management of trigeminal neuralgia, the commonest facial pain condition treated by the neurosurgeon. The advantages offered by microvascular decompression as a treatment are reviewed and compared with medical treatment and percutaneous techniques.
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Relief of Facial Pain

Drugs, 1979
Pain in the face has always been a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge to the practising clinician. As a presenting symptom, it immediately sharpens and arouses the interest of the neurologist, in spite of the fact that its definitive diagnosis is not always easy.
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Cyclic Facial Pain

Postgraduate Medicine, 1969
Differentiation of the various headache syndromes depends to a large extent on the patient's “blow-by-blow” account of his attacks. In cluster headache, ergotamine tartrate used prophylactically is the agent of choice. Glossopharyngeal neuralgia responds best to carbamazepine.
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Headaches and facial pain

Therapeutische Umschau, 1999
Internationale Kopfschmerz-Klassifikationssysteme differenzieren gegenwärtig mehr als 150 Arten von Kopf- und Gesichtsschmerzen. Der folgende Beitrag gliedert charakteristische Schmerzarten nach der zeitlichen Dauer der typischen Manifestationen. Einerseits werden besonders häufige, andererseits solche Syndrome behandelt, die hinweisend sind für ...
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EXTRAORAL FACIAL PAIN

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 2000
Craniofacial pain is a common chief complaint and is among the most frustrating diagnostic and treatment challenges encountered by emergency physicians. The efficient development of a differential diagnosis, the delivery of appropriate and effective therapies, and the appropriate referral of patients who present with craniofacial pain from extraoral ...
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Headache and facial pain

Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, 1949
T HE complaint of pain somewhere in the head or face is probably the most common symptom encountered in everyday medical practice. Many of these chronic sufferers who cannot be cured by the physician or medical specialist frequently find their way to the dental surgeon for examination of their teeth and jaws. Occasionally the cause of the trouble is to
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