Chronic pain -- Patients -- Interviews. : The truth about chronic pain : patients and professionals on how to face it, understand it, overcome it / Arthur Rosenfeld
Chronic Pain -- physiopathology : From acute to chronic back pain : risk factors, mechanisms, and clinical implications / edited by Monika I. Hasenbring, Adina C. Rusu, Dennis C. Turk
Chronic pain -- Prevention : Chronic pain epidemiology : from aetiology to public health / edited by Peter Croft, Fiona M. Blyth, Danielle van der Windt
Chronic pain -- Treatment -- United States -- Congresses : Advancing therapeutic development for pain and opioid use disorders through public-private partnerships : proceedings of a workshop / Lisa Bain, Sheena M. Posey Norris, and Clare Stroud, rapporteurs ; Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders, Board on Health Sciences Policy, Health and Medicine Division, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, Medicine
Aching sensation that persists for more than a few months. It may or may not be associated with trauma or disease, and may persist after the initial injury has healed. Its localization, character, and timing are more vague than with acute pain
Aching sensation that persists for more than a few months. It may or may not be associated with trauma or disease, and may persist after the initial injury has healed. Its localization, character, and timing are more vague than with acute pain
Aching sensation that persists for more than a few months. It may or may not be associated with trauma or disease, and may persist after the initial injury has healed. Its localization, character, and timing are more vague than with acute pain
INFLAMMATION of the PANCREAS that is characterized by recurring or persistent ABDOMINAL PAIN with or without STEATORRHEA or DIABETES MELLITUS. It is characterized by the irregular destruction of the pancreatic parenchyma which may be focal, segmental, or diffuse
The organic and psychogenic disturbances observed after closed head injuries (HEAD INJURIES, CLOSED). Post-concussion syndrome includes subjective physical complaints (i.e. headache, dizziness), cognitive, emotional, and behavioral changes. These disturbances can be chronic, permanent, or late emerging
Involuntary, forcible, rapid, jerky movements that may be subtle or become confluent, markedly altering normal patterns of movement. Hypotonia and pendular reflexes are often associated. Conditions which feature recurrent or persistent episodes of chorea as a primary manifestation of disease are referred to as CHOREATIC DISORDERS. Chorea is also a frequent manifestation of BASAL GANGLIA DISEASES