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Analgesia is the reduction in pain brought about by chemical, electrical or psychological means (eg hypnosis).
Naturally occuring analgesia[]
Psychological analgesia[]
Chemical analgesia[]
Electrical analgesia[]
- Electrotherapy
- Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) (the most commonly used)
- Interferential Current (IFC)
- Galvanic Stimulation (GS)
See also[]
- Antianalgesia
- Analgesic drugs
- Aneasthesia (feeling)
- Opioid-induced hyperalgesia
- Patient-controlled analgesia
- Pain management
- Pain measurement
- Pain perception
References[]
Pain and nociception | |
---|---|
Head and neck |
Jaw and mouth (Odynophagia ) • Ear (otalgia, otitis media, otitis externa) • Eye (glaucoma) |
Thorax |
Back (upper back, lower back, spinal disc herniation, degenerative disc disease, coccydynia) |
Abdominal |
Left and right upper quadrant (peptic ulcer disease, gastroenteritis, hepatitis, pancreatitis, |
Limbs |
Arm (myocardial infarction, left arm) • Leg (deep vein thrombosis, |
Joints (arthralgia) |
Small joints (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, gout, pseudogout • |
Musculoskeletal |
Delayed onset muscle soreness, myalgia, physical trauma |
Other/unspecified |
cold pressor test, congenital insensitivity to pain, dolorimeter, |
Related concepts |
Anterolateral system, gate control theory of pain, pain management (anesthesia, cordotomy), |