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Atypical Facial Pain/Persistent Idiopathic Facial Pain

2020
Atypical 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
openaire   +1 more source

Altered cortical excitability in persistent idiopathic facial pain

Cephalalgia, 2018
Introduction Persistent idiopathic facial pain is a refractory and disabling condition of unknown mechanism and etiology. It has been suggested that persistent idiopathic facial pain patients have not only peripheral generators of pain, but also central ...
R. Galhardoni   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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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Alexithymia and temporomandibular joint and facial pain in the general population

Journal of Oral Rehabilitation, 2018
BACKGROUND Associations of alexithymia with temporomandibular pain disorders (TMD), facial pain, head pain and migraine have been described, but the role of the different dimensions of alexithymia in pain development remained incompletely understood ...
S. Kindler   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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.
openaire   +2 more sources

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

Medicine, 2000
Abstract Headache is the most common presenting symptom in a neurological clinic. Although seldom life-threatening, it is a major cause of suffering, and loss of productivity at work due to headache is extremely costly. Patients seeking advice about one particular headache often have a febrile illness such as influenza or sinusitis.
openaire   +1 more source

Facial Pain

Hospital Practice, 1985
D A, Crews, C A, Warfield
openaire   +3 more sources

[Facial pains].

Revue medicale suisse, 2006
Facial pain can represent an expression of an initial symptom of a severe primary neurological disease. Some examples are presented. In the second part chronic pain like facial pain, stomatodynia, odontalgia and temporomandibular disorders are illustrated and grouped together under the name idiopathic facial or orofacial pain.
Franco, Regli, Annelise, Dewarrat
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Facial pain

2008
Abstract This chapter covers facial pain associated with rhinosinusitis, facial neuralgias, post-herpetic neuralgia, temporomandibular disorder, and chronic idiopathic facial pain (atypical facial pain).
David Kernick, Peter J. Goadsby
openaire   +1 more source

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