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Nociceptive pain alerts the body to potential or actual tissue damage.
It was drawn up for cancer, but is equally applicable to chronic nociceptive pain.
One, sometimes called nociceptive pain, results from damage to tissues, as from arthritis or a burn.
Nociceptive pain is immediate pain felt as a result of injury inflicted upon tissue.
Arterial ulcers can cause nociceptive pain as a result of peripheral ischemia.
Nociceptive pain generally responds well to opioids and/or coanalgesics.
Nociceptive pain is a physiological response described as stabbing, throbbing, aching, or sharp.
One, called nociceptive pain, “arises from injury to muscles, tendons and ligaments or in the internal organs,” she writes.
In this review, the treatment of neuropathic pain and chronic nociceptive pain will be dealt with separately.
David Bowsher describes it as nociceptive pain that is not receptive (does he mean responsive?) to opioids.
The five trials were completed in acute migraine, nociceptive pain and neuropathic pain models.
Learn how inflammation stimulates nociceptive pain.
Nociceptive pain that is persistent may due to conditions causing ongoing tissue damage such as ischemia, or edema.
Nociceptive pain includes somatic and visceral pain.
Acute pain is nociceptive pain that serves as a warning to prevent mechanical, chemical, and thermal injuries.
Neuropathic pain may require different interventions and medications than the traditional analgesics, which are effective in the treatment of nociceptive pain.
A distinction must be made between nociceptive pain not responding to morphine (paradoxical pain) and over-morphinisation.
It is a prerequisite for nociception, which itself is a prerequisite for nociceptive pain.
Nociceptive pain is also relatively resistant to morphine and other opioids when there is peripheral or central neural sensitisation.
It represents a novel approach to the treatment of acute and chronic nociceptive pain conditions such as post-operative pain and arthritic diseases.
Editor,- David Bowsher defines paradoxical pain as chronic nociceptive pain that does not respond to morphine.
It seems to be more helpful with neuropathic and ischemic pain than nociceptive pain, and is not often used in the treatment of cancer pain.
Nociceptive pain may also be divided into "visceral", "deep somatic" and "superficial somatic" pain.
Nociceptive pain is considered to be an appropriate to painful stimuli that occurs as a result from underlying tissue damage and may be acute or chronic.
It is these cases of nociceptive pain not receptive to opioids which have become known as 'paradoxical pain' or 'overwhelming pain syndrome.'