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Myofascial Pain Syndrome

Neurologic Clinics, 1989
Myofascial pain syndrome is a regional muscle pain disorder that is the most common physical diagnosis causing chronic pain. The complex symptoms, concomitant disorders, and frequent behavioral and psychosocial contributing factors make this disorder frequently overlooked and difficult to treat.
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Myofascial Pain Syndromes

Postgraduate Medicine, 1973
Just as pulling the trigger of a gun produces remote effects, so does stimulation of a trigger area in myofascial syndrome produce pain and associated reactions at another site. Pinpointing and treating the trigger area usually provides good relief of the pain.
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Otolaryngic myofascial pain syndromes

Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2004
It has been long recognized in the otolaryngic community that despite great effort dedicated to the physiology and pathology of the ear, nose, throat/head and neck, there are a number of symptoms, including pain in various locations about the head and neck, which cannot be explained by traditional otolaryngic principles.
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Myofascial pain-dysfunction syndrome

The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry, 1978
Of the 127 patients treated for MPDS over a 30 month period, only six patients did not make at least a 90% recovery within 3 to 4 months. In most instances a spectacular degree of success was achieved within 2 to 3 weeks. Ten percent of the patients who were treated had had symptoms of the MPDS for a period longer than 5 years.
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Urologic myofascial pain syndromes

Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2004
Treatment of pain of urogenital origin, chronic pelvic pain syndrome, can be frustrating for patients and physicians. The usual approaches do not always produce the desired results. Visceral pain from pelvic organs and myofascial pain from muscle trigger points share common characteristics.
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Regional Myofascial Pain Syndromes

Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America, 1989
MPS are regional pain syndromes characterized by a tender trigger point in muscle (sometimes with an accompanying palpable abnormality in consistency) producing pain in a characteristic reference zone. There is abundant evidence supporting MPS as an important cause of regional musculoskeletal pain, and a small but growing body of quantitative clinical ...
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Myofascial Pain Syndrome

2018
Myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) is a pain condition that may be acute, but it is most commonly chronic. MPS is often associated with myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) in muscle and connective tissue including fascia. Active MTrPs are one of the major peripheral pain generators for musculoskeletal pain conditions.
Andrea L. Nicol   +3 more
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Myofascial pain syndrome.

Orthopaedic review, 1988
Myofascial pain, a general descriptive term, is applied to painful sensations that extend along one or more skeletal muscles and their fascia. Trigger points, discrete hyperesthetic areas within the muscle and its fascia, are characteristically found in myofascial pain. On the other hand, myofascial pain syndrome is a painful condition characterized by
P L, Escobar, J, Ballesteros
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Myofascial pain syndrome

Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association, 1986
D, Mance   +4 more
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Myofascial Pain Syndrome

The Journal of Emergency Medicine, 2016
Luis Miguel, Gonzalez-Perez   +1 more
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