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Question Category:
SYMPTOMS - NERVOUS
 


In the 'Symptoms - Nervous' section of our in-depth questionnaire we ask the following question about facial pain:
 
Do you sometimes experience pain on one or both sides of your face?

 

Your answer  

...indicates  

...and suggests
1.   "Don't know"      
2.   "No"    Absence of facial pain   A symptom
3.   "Yes, tends to be a constant pain"    Having constant facial pain   A symptom
4.   "Moderate shooting type pain"    Shooting facial pain   A symptom
5.   "Sudden, severe, or lancing pain"    Shooting facial pain   A symptom


Your answer will affect the likelihoods of the conditions below.  Any answers in green reduce the likelihood of the condition.
 
Answers Condition Comment

 

 

3

4

5

Osteonecrosis of the Jaw

--

 

 

3

4

5

Trigeminal Neuralgia / Facial Pain

The typical trigeminal neuralgia is characterized by sudden, severe and lancing pain in the face, like an electric shock.



GLOSSARY

Trigeminal Neuralgia (Facial Neuralgia, Tic Douloureux)
This condition involves pain in the trigeminal nerve - chief sensory nerve of the face and the motor nerve enabling chewing. It is a disorder of the trigeminal nerve producing bouts of severe, lancinating pain lasting seconds to minutes in the distribution of one or more of its sensory divisions, most often the mandibular and/or maxillary. The cause is uncertain. Recently, at surgery or autopsy, arterial and - less often - venous loops have been found compressing the trigeminal nerve root at its entry point into the brainstem, which suggests that this is essentially a compressive neuropathy. Adults usually are affected, especially later in life. The pain is often set off by touching a trigger point or by activity (e.g. chewing or brushing the teeth). Although each bout of intense pain is brief, successive bouts may incapacitate the patient.




Last updated: May 10, 2007


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