How can a knife cut, electroshock, needle sting, burning facial pain be treated?

Trident nerve pain is a severe pain that occurs in the facial trident neuropsychological area, causing pain to patients, even when speaking, brushing their teeth or a breeze, as a result of which patients are often afraid to wipe their faces, eat and even swallow, seriously affecting their normal lives and work, which some call “the first pain in the world”.

The diagnosis of trident neuropsychiatric pain is largely dependent on the patient ‘ s history. As mentioned above, pain is characterized by severe pain in the form of one-sided, hairy, slash, electroshock or tornado, and can cause pain through skin irritation such as skin touching, chewing, brushing, blowing or shaving. In comparison with neuropsychological pain, the characteristic of neurological pain is burning the pain with numbness.

Over time, the mitigation period has become shorter and the pain has become longer. When pain cannot be triggered, it has often progressed to a difficult time. One third of the patients suffer pain at night. The first pain of a simple trident nerve is rare.

Patients who respond well to neuropharmaceuticals, such as kamasis, usually support the diagnosis of typical trident neuropsychiatric pains and suggest better microvascular repressures. All patients who plan to perform MVDs should be scanned by MRI or computer faults (CT) to remove structural pathologies, such as meningitis, hearing neuromagnosis and skin cyst. In high-resolution T2W images, it is often found that vascular rings clearly oppress trident nerve.

Surgery signs for microvascular decompression for trident neurological pain.

Drugs have been used to treat neurological pain, and some patients still suffer from it, so they seek more permanent surgical treatment. Acute facial pain is not an adaptation to MVD. Before an operation is considered, the patient must have at least one year of active drug intervention. This view is justified by the fact that some patients suffer from temporary pain. Surgery adaptation should include, but not be limited to, patients with ineffective or adverse medical treatment. After the operation, the patient can completely relieve the ER and achieve a cure.