(Diş Hekimliği) Bir sinir yolu veya ucunda, batıcı veya zonklayıcı karakterde şiddetli ağrı; sinir ağrısı. Trigeminal - trigeminal sinirin bir veya daha çok dalında ağrı nöbetleri; prosopalgia, trismus dolorificus da denir
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
Определение neuralgia в Английский Язык Английский Язык словарь
Sharp, severe paroxysmal (i e , caused by a sudden attack, recurrence, or intensification of a disease) pain extending along a nerve or group of nerves
Pain in the back of the head, originating from injury to nerves of the upper neck
Excruciating pains begin in the throat and radiate to the ears or down the neck, with or without a trigger (e.g., sneezing, yawning, chewing). Usually separated by long intervals, attacks subside before analgesics take effect. Surgery may help in extreme cases. See also neuritis
A disease, the chief symptom of which is a very acute pain, exacerbating or intermitting, which follows the course of a nervous branch, extends to its ramifications, and seems therefore to be seated in the nerve
Neuralgia is very severe pain along the whole length of a nerve caused when the nerve is damaged or not working properly. a sharp pain along the length of a nerve (neur- ( NEUR-) + algos ). Pain of unknown cause in the area covered by a peripheral sensory nerve. In trigeminal neuralgia (tic douloureux), brief attacks of severe shooting pain along a branch of the trigeminal nerve (in front of the ear) usually begin after middle age, more often in women. Initially weeks or months apart, they become more frequent and easily triggered by touching the affected area, talking, eating, or cold. Analgesics help, but permanent cure requires surgery. Glossopharyngeal neuralgia causes recurring severe pain, most often in men over
(Tıp, İlaç) Erythromelalgia, also known as Mitchell's disease (after Silas Weir Mitchell), acromelalgia, red neuralgia, or erythermalgia, is a rare neurovascular peripheral pain disorder in which blood vessels, usually in the lower extremities (or hands), are episodically blocked (frequently on and off daily), then become hyperemic and inflamed
Paroxysmal shooting pains of the facial area around one or more branches of the trigeminal nerve, of unknown cause, but often precipitated by irritation of the affected area. Also called tic douloureux