Trident neuropsychiatrical pain diagnosis: Based on typical clinical performance, trident neuropsychiatric pain can be diagnosed, distinguishing between primary trident neuropsychiatric pain and secondary trident neuropsychiatric pain.
1. Trident neuroreflective physiology tests may assist in the diagnosis of primary trident nervous pain.
2. The presence of a trident nervous sense or a concurrent disease on both sides may cause a secondary trident nervous pain, but, due to their low degree of speciality, patients who do not have the above-mentioned characteristics cannot exclude secondary trident nervous pain.
Pre-operative video screening (MRI, CT, etc.) can help to identify secondary trident neuropsychological pains, but for primary trident neuropsychological pains, pre-operative imaging tests (MRI, CT, etc.) do not detect or exclude the existence of a responsible vascular pressure on trident neurons, but pre-occupy imaging examinations for trident neuropsy patients are still recommended.
A person with a relatively young age at which the patient is ill, an abnormal trident neuro-induced power table, poor drug treatment and a pain in the first trident nervous area do not point to an initial trident nervous pain.
ii. Pregenerative trident neuropsytic diagnosis
Primary trident nerve pain requires identification with:
1- Secondary trident nerve pain:
Trident neurological pains caused by tumours, aneurysms, aneurysms, aneurysms, etc.
2. Toothaches:
The toothaches are mainly manifested in permanent swelling of the tooth and face, and in pain in the face. Examinations show swelling of the teeth, local prostration pains, restricted mouths, and clearly diagnosed and treated pains disappear.
Trident neurosis:
The effects of trident nerve disease due to head inflammation, metabolic changes, i.e. diabetes, poisoning and trident nerve, are manifested in persistent pain in the trident neuropsychiatric area; most of them occur on one side and a few on both sides. Neural system examinations reveal a decrease in the feeling of the trident neuropsychological zone, and in some cases of exhausting exercise.
4 – Neural pain in the tongue: The pain is mostly in the depths of the face, in the tongue, in the soft-tongue, in the tonsils, in the stomach and in the outer ear. The nature and duration of the pain is similar to the trident nerve pain, with a few patients having a “trigger point” which is generally in the cell or the tongue.
5. Fluttershy neurological pain: The main manifestation is persistent pain in the face, which can be transmitted to the root of the nose, the cheek, the deep of the eye, the ear, the breastbrush and the pillow. The pain is of a burning nature, of a continuous nature, and it is not visible, and the closed hysteria is effective.
Pre-operative video assessment
All persons with trident neuropsychiatric pain are routinely subjected to a visual examination (CT or MRI) prior to treatment, which is used to distinguish primary or secondary trident neuropsychiatric pain.
For patients diagnosed with initial trident neuropsychiatric pain, a head MRI examination is recommended prior to microvascular repressure. The skull MRI examination, although it shows an anatomical relationship between the blood vessels around the trident nerve root and its posterior root, does not establish the responsible blood vessels.