Articles on Pain and Headache
Pain may be described as the unpleasant awareness of a noxious stimulus or bodily harm. Individuals experience pain by various hurts and aches, and sometimes through more serious injuries or illnesses. Pain of any type is the most common reason for physician consultation in the United States, prompting half of all Americans to seek medical care annually. It is a major symptom in many medical conditions, significantly interfering with a person's quality of life and general functioning. Diagnosis is based on describing pain in various ways — according to duration, intensity, type (dull, burning, throbbing or stabbing), source or location in body.
Headache is a term used to describe aching or pain that occurs in one or more areas of the head, face, mouth or neck. Headache can be chronic, recurrent or occasional. The pain can be mild or severe enough to disrupt daily activities. Headaches fall into two categories — primary and secondary.
Primary headaches account for about 90% of all headaches, and include three types — tension, cluster and migraine. Tension headache is the most common. Episodes usually begin in middle age and are often associated with the stress, anxiety and depression that can develop during these years. Cluster headaches occur daily over a period of weeks, sometimes months. They may disappear and then recur during the same season in the following year. A migraine headache is a throbbing or pulsating headache that is often one-sided and associated with nausea, vomiting, sleep disruption, depression and sensitivity to light, sound and smells. Attacks are often recurrent and tend to become less severe as the migraine sufferer ages.
Secondary headaches are associated with an underlying condition such as cerebrovascular disease, head trauma, infection, tumor or metabolic disorder. Head pain also can result from syndromes involving the eyes, ears, neck, teeth or sinuses. In these cases, the underlying condition must be diagnosed and treated. Also, certain medications may include headache as a side effect.
11/16/2009 - Articles
Neck pain is common, with around 15% of the population reporting a new episode each year. Put another way, around half of the adult population will have neck pain during any six month period and for 5% the pain causes some disability. Recurrence and persistence of neck pain are also only too common. There is a form of neck pain called cervical radiculopathy which is even more troublesome. Cervical radiculopathy radiates into the arm and causes numbness, weakness and tingling in the arm and shooting pains. Fortunately, cervical radiculopathy is one of the less common forms of neck pain.
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09/14/2009 - Articles
It's said that 2/3 of adults suffer from low back pain at some time in their lives. Maybe you've had your attack already.
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07/22/2009 - Articles
Tubular diskectomy is no better than more conventional techniques for relieving sciatica.
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07/01/2009 - Articles
Women with migraine have proved to have brain lesions detectable by scans. However, this does not mean that migraine will lead to brain disease. Future research in this area may shed new light upon how migraine affects brain function.
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06/30/2009 - Articles
Persistent chronic pain - often experienced in the lower back - can interfere with your concentration, memory, and obviously, your mood. Jesse Cannone, an expert in this field, provides here some insight into the problem.
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06/19/2009 - Articles
Chronic pain is a very real experience- and not just "in your head". But one of the solutions to dealing effectively with chronic pain does lie within your head. Part 1 explains why chronic pain is important and the kinds of responses people have to it.
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06/16/2009 - Articles
Introduction
Shingles is a painful skin condition that people associate in their minds with chickenpox. It is, in fact, caused by a re-emergence of the virus that causes chickenpox (varicella), many years after the original childhood illness.
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06/16/2009 - Articles
As we age, many of us get tears of the rotator cuff that produce pain at night, interfering with sleep. It's not just an athletic injury.
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06/05/2009 - Articles
There are several types of medicines that can be used to prevent a migraine attack: blood pressure drugs (beta-blockers, calcium-channel blockers, and ACE inhibitors), and some anti-seizure drugs.
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06/05/2009 - Articles
Women are three times more likely to suffer from migraine than men.
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