Mr. Zhang, aged 50, has been in pain from time to time for almost six months when he has found his right tongue and throat, feeling like a knife cut, burned and sometimes even his ears and neck. This pain often comes suddenly and is then temporarily alleviated. Thus, Mr. Zhang went to the pain department, the neurological section, the Chinese doctor ‘ s acupuncture, etc. for treatment, but the pain was never reduced. This afternoon at the Professor Kang Haitao Clinic, I was wondering if there were any cures.
According to Mr. Zhang ‘ s account, the initial neurological pain of the tongue is felt, and the general clinical symptoms are that of the side of the tongue, the throat, the tonsils, the head of the ear, and the back of the jaw, sometimes manifested mainly by the pain in the ear, which suddenly stops when it swallows, talks, eats, coughs or blows. Such diseases can easily be confused with tridental pains, usually tested through a cranial neurography, Lidocaine. The disease is a cranial neurosis, the cause of which is inside the skull and can only be mitigated and uncurable with regard to the treatment of drugs due to cycling between the larvae and the blood vessels.
Early cases of neurological pain in the tongue can be treated with oral drugs, such as Camassipin and Okassipin, which can reduce neurosensitivity and relieve symptoms through rational neurons that inhibit pain. It is important to note that the medication has some therapeutic effect on some patients, but pain relief after taking the medication can only last a few hours and then again. In addition, long-term drug use not only reduces the efficacy of the drug, but also produces adverse effects, such as dizziness, aversion to sleep, unstable walking and, in serious cases, impaired liver and kidney function.
In the case of Mr. Zhang, medication can be used to relieve pain, and microvascular stress can be considered for treatment if it is felt to be unbearable and the effects of the medication are poor. That is, a 5cm cut in the face of the ablution, with a skull drill of 2.5 cm to the right and left bone window, and then a closer look under the microscope, find the responsible blood vessels and insert them into the Teflon mattress, separate the nerves from the veins, and protect them from oppression, so that the pain disappears.
Microvascular decompression is currently the only effective means of treating neuropsychotic pains in the tongue, while protecting normal nervous functions to the maximum extent.