| dysesthesia | An unpleasant abnormal sensation, whether spontaneous or evoked. Origin: Gr. Aisthesis = sensation (16 Dec 1997) |
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| dysesthesia |
A condition in which a sense, especially touch, is distorted. Dysesthesia can cause an ordinary stimulus to be unpleasant or painful. It can also cause insensitivity to a stimulus.
Ãâó: www.stjude.org/glossary
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| dysesthesia |
(noun) 1. sensations on the skin, such as the pricks of pins and needles, or of crawling 2. impairment of a sensitivity, esp. of touch 3. painfulness of any sensation that isn
Ãâó: www.orgsites.com/fl/adjuvantdisease/_pgg9.php3
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| dysesthesia |
an unpleasant, or painful, response to a normal stimulus; for example pain from being touched lightly
Ãâó: www.conquerchiari.org/Glossary.htm
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| dysesthesia |
An impairment or distortion of any sense, especially that of touch; an abnormal sensation in which normal stimuli may produce an unpleasant sensation, such as itching or burning.
Ãâó: www.med.uwo.ca/ecosystemhealth/education/glossary....
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| dysesthesia |
is a bizarre sensation which cannot be described. It is an unpleasant sensation with was unfamiliar until onset of the Central Pain, a novel mix of some of the primary pain components. It is usually associated with burning, but the patient has never felt this sensation before contracting neuropathic disease. The message perceived by the brain is one of "tissue destruction" with burning the most prominent component. (Pain is a construct).
Ãâó: www.painonline.org/glossary.htm
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