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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An elongated styloid process may be a source of craniofacial and cervical pain. This condition is characterized by a dull, nagging, pharyngeal pain and a palpatory finding in the tonsillar fossa. Sometimes the pain is localized, or radiates to the jaw and ear and may simulate pain of dental origin. Radiographic demonstration of styloid elongation is readily made in most instances. The only effective treatment is surgical shortening of the styloid process. Eight patients undergoing surgery for elongated styloids are reported. Six were previously treated under an incorrect diagnosis such as oral, dental or temporomandibular disease, and subsequently mostly inappropriate dental treatments and exodontia were performed. An evaluation of the intraoral versus the external approach is presented. The few and isolated reported cases of stylalgia masquerading as dental pain and the ensuing mistreatment warranted the writing of this paper.
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PMID:Elongated styloid process syndrome masquerading as pain of dental origin. 346 88

A mail survey was undertaken to estimate the prevalence of oral and facial pain and discomfort in the City of Toronto. Self-complete questionnaires were sent to a random sample of 1014 persons drawn from the voter's list. Replies were received from 72% of those eligible. Overall, 53% of respondents had experienced some pain or discomfort in the 4 wk prior to the completion of the questionnaire. The most common kinds of pain and discomfort reported were pain in the teeth with hot or cold fluids (28.8%), sore and bleeding gums (26.3%) and toothache (14.1%). Pain in jaws, face and oral mucosa was reported by less than 10% of the subjects. While much of the pain experienced by the respondents was classified as mild, half (50.1%) said that it was moderately severe or severe. Only 40% of those reporting pain had sought the advice of a dentist or doctor. Sex differences in the reporting of pain were small and statistically non-significant, although age differences were marked and significant. The younger age groups were more likely to report both pain and discomfort than the older age groups. The survey has revealed a substantial amount of oral and facial pain in the community, much of which is not subject to professional attention.
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PMID:Prevalence of oral and facial pain and discomfort: preliminary results of a mail survey. 347 3

Previous studies have shown that muscle exercise and low frequency transcutaneous nerve stimulation (TNS) give rise to an analgesic effect in humans and animals. Endorphin has been proposed to mediate this analgesia. In this investigation, the effect of muscle exercise and low frequency TNS, on dental pain thresholds was studied and the possible involvement of endorphinergic mechanisms was investigated using naloxone as an antagonist. Dental pain thresholds were measured in 11 volunteers following leg or arm exercise and after low frequency TNS of the hands or face. After exercise (20 min) or stimulation (30 min) either 0.8 mg naloxone (2 ml) or saline (2 ml) was injected i.v. in a double-blind fashion. Pain thresholds were measured repetitively before and after exercise or stimulation. Both leg and arm exercise increased pain threshold. Stimulation of the hands also increased pain threshold, but less than arm exercise. A marked increase in pain threshold was seen after face stimulation. These changes in pain threshold were unaffected following injections of either naloxone or saline, except for an early and short-lasting reduction when naloxone was injected following arm exercise. The increases in pain threshold following muscle exercise and after low frequency TNS, showed similarities suggesting that a common mechanism might be involved. The pain threshold increase after arm exercise could only be partially mediated by endorphinergic mechanisms.
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PMID:Effects of naloxone on dental pain threshold following muscle exercise and low frequency transcutaneous nerve stimulation: a comparative study in man. 348 46

Recent animal studies indicate that vasopressin has analgetic properties. The aim of this study was to find out if lypressin, a vasopressin analogue, produces analgesia in man. The effect of i.n. lypressin (5 and 10 I.U.) on experimental pain was tested in healthy humans. The lower dose proved high enough to produce a significant antidiuretic effect. Lypressin did not have any marked analgetic effect at these doses either on ischaemic, cutaneous thermal, or dental pain. The results indicate that lypressin cannot be used for pain relief in man at doses low enough not to produce a hazardous water retention.
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PMID:Human pain thresholds after the application of lypressin, a vasopressin analogue. 362 76

The efficacy of single doses (1.2 g) of soluble aspirin and aspirin tablets was determined in a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel study in 90 patients (45 females) with postoperative pain after removal of impacted lower third molars. Also investigated was the relationship between plasma aspirin esterase activity and overall pain scores after both aspirin preparations. Patients reported significantly less pain (p less than 0.001) after treatment with aspirin than after treatment with placebo. However, patients receiving soluble aspirin reported both an earlier onset and a longer duration of pain relief than those who received aspirin tablets. A significant correlation was observed between plasma aspirin esterase activity and overall pain scores after both soluble aspirin (r = 0.57, p less than 0.01) and aspirin tablets (r = 0.51, p less than 0.02). It is concluded that soluble aspirin is the preferred aspirin formulation for treating postoperative pain after third molar surgery and that plasma aspirin esterase activity is determinant of a patient's analgesic response to aspirin in postoperative dental pain.
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PMID:Comparative efficacy of soluble aspirin and aspirin tablets in postoperative dental pain. 374 27

The effect of cyproheptadine on growth hormone (GH) secretion and dental pain threshold elevation during physical exercise was studied in healthy human subjects. Different levels of exercise (200-300 W) were produced by a cycle-ergometer. Dental pain thresholds were tested with a constant current pulp tester. In all 6 subjects dental pain thresholds and the heart rate were increased with increasing work load. Cyproheptadine did not have any significant effect on dental pain threshold elevations, although it suppressed the exercise-induced GH release. The results indicate that the exercise-induced dental pain threshold elevation is not based on GH-related stress mechanisms, since cyproheptadine did not reverse the pain threshold elevation.
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PMID:Elevation of dental pain threshold induced in man by physical exercise is not reversed by cyproheptadine-mediated suppression of growth hormone release. 377 37

Tooth pulp-evoked single-neuron responses were recorded in the spinal trigeminal nucleus caudalis of the cat. The thresholds to monopolar electric pulses of various durations (0.2 to 20 ms) were determined using a constant current stimulator. With stimulus pulse durations of 10 to 20 ms, the thresholds were comparable with those of primary afferent A-fibers, although the most sensitive primary afferent fibers had lower thresholds. Primary afferent C-fibers had higher thresholds than the postsynaptic neurons studied. The threshold for the tooth pulp-elicited jaw-opening response was obtained at a lower stimulus intensity than the liminal response in most postsynaptic neurons of this study. The threshold rise of the postsynaptic trigeminal neurons with decreasing stimulus pulse duration (from 5 to 0.2 ms) was much steeper than that of primary afferent A-fibers or jaw-opening response. The strength-duration curves for tooth pulp-elicited pain sensations in man resemble those of spinal trigeminal neurons. Sixty-two percent of the units had a threshold elevation during a noxious pinch of the tail. The results indicate that the activation of postsynaptic trigeminal neurons requires a considerable temporal summation of primary afferent impulses. The jaw reflex thresholds cannot be explained by the properties of the neurons in the subnucleus caudalis of the trigeminal tract. The results support the concept that dental pain is based on the activation of spinal trigeminal nucleus caudalis neurons receiving their input from intradental A-fibers.
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PMID:Tooth pulp-evoked activity in the spinal trigeminal nucleus caudalis of cat: comparison to primary afferent fiber, reflex, and sensory responses. 379 75

The McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) and the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) were administered to 72 subjects with burning mouth syndrome (BMS) who were also requested to match the levels of their clinical pain to line lengths on a visual analogue scale (VAS) and to experimentally induced warm and painful thermal stimuli. The responses of 102 toothache pain subjects and 43 asymptomatic age- and sex-matched control subjects were used to compare the responses of the BMS subjects on the MPQ and MMPI, respectively. The results indicated that BMS pain is quantitatively similar to, but qualitatively different from, toothache pain, that self-reports of BMS pain appear to be valid, that when compared to the asymptomatic control subjects, BMS subjects show elevations in certain personality characteristics which are similar to those seen in other chronic pain patients, and that these personality disturbances tend to increase with increased pain. Therefore, our findings indicate that the pain of BMS is more severe than has previously been suggested and that the severity of this pain may explain some of the personality changes which occur in the BMS subjects.
Pain 1987 Feb
PMID:Pain and personality profiles in burning mouth syndrome. 382 1

From September 1981 to February 1982, an epidemiologic study was carried out on the incidence of pain conditions among patients between 18 and 70 yr of age in 30 dental practices in Ribe County, Denmark. A total of 35 464 patients consulted the 50 participating dentists during the study period. 823 patients consulted the dentist due to pain. The most frequent cause of pain was caries sequelae (pulpitis (35%) and acute apical periodontitis (31%)). There was a significant difference in the distribution of the diagnoses between patients with regular and non-regular dental care. Although the data in the present study may not be representative for the entire Danish population, it seems reasonable to assume that in Denmark there are at least 70 000 annual consultations to a dentist due to pain. Furthermore, a minimum of 4000 patients can be expected to be absent from work annually, due to illness caused by dental pain.
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PMID:Incidence of pain conditions in dental practice in a Danish county. 386 9

In a randomised double-blind trial in postoperative ambulant day case dental patients suprofen 200 mg (29 patients) was compared with dextropropoxyphene hydrochloride 65 mg and paracetamol 650 mg (Cosalgesic, 28 patients) both available four times daily for 3 days. Suprofen was better than cosalgesic in the patients' opinion of initial (p = 0.01) and overall pain relief (p = 0.08) compared to Cosalgesic and the second night's sleep was better (p = 0.01). Side effects were reported in six suprofen patients and 10 cosalgesic patients (two suffering from vomiting withdrew). Suprofen, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug is as good as, or better than, a widely used opioid-paracetamol mixture for ambulant patients with postoperative dental pain.
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PMID:Suprofen compared to dextropropoxyphene hydrochloride and paracetamol (Cosalgesic) after extraction of wisdom teeth under general anaesthesia. 389 16


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