On 4 November, during an outpatient consultation, Ms. Fong was speaking and suddenly had a pain in the left face, and she immediately took out a towel and rubbed her face, which was not helpful. It’s painful to see a woman suffering from a trident nerve:
Paradoxically: For more than a decade, the trident on the left has had a nervous pain, has been on Camassipin and Okassipin, has improved, has stopped, has deteriorated in the gradual treatment of drugs, has prevented her from speaking, has increased in recent weeks, and has been severely painful for her.
Following an out-patient visit, Prof. Kang Haitao, a team of neurosurgery neuropsychiatric neuropsychiatrics experts at the First Hospital of the University of Transport in Sian, recommended that she first increase her dose and then evaluate microvascular repressure treatment. After hearing that surgical treatment was available, Ms. Fong immediately asked to be hospitalized for surgical treatment: “This disease is too painful, too painful, and it is hoped that it will be done as soon as possible if it is able to be treated”.
Hospital admission on the afternoon of 4 November: an evaluation of the neuropsychiatrics of the skull at night revealed the existence of trident neuropsychological and vascular stress, which was an accommodative condition for microvascular stress therapy.
Improved screening on 5 November and the operation on 6 November, in the hope that her suffering will be lifted as soon as possible!
The expert reminds me that trident neuropsychological pains should not be tolerated, as soon as possible.
Trident neurological pain is a pain of one or more hairy, violent electroshock or knife-scratching, repeated, which is known as “the first pain in the world”.
Clinical performance: Tridental neurological pain occurs mostly among middle-aged seniors, with facial pain on one side.
The disease is characterized by a sudden onset, a stop, lightning sample, a cut, burning sample, stubbornness and unbearable acute pain in the area of the trident nerve distribution of the head. Speeches, washes, brushes or breezes, even when walking, can lead to severe pain in the course of a single act. The pain lasted for seconds or minutes, and the pain was cyclical and intermittent, as was normal.
If the symptoms are described above and the cause of the secondary disease is excluded, they can be controlled first by Qamaxipin, Okasipin, and Phubarin, and can be treated without pain or pain to patients who are less effective and unable to withstand the complications.
For young patients, we prefer microvascular repressure treatment, in which there is a hysteria of oppression and trident neurosynthesis, which, once completely decompressed, can serve the purpose of cure. Even for the elderly and ill-health patients, there are treatments available for the use of scyte-pressed surgery, and the post-operative effects are excellent.