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  2. Phantom pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phantom_pain

    The neurological basis and mechanisms for phantom pain are all derived from experimental theories and observations. Little is known about the true mechanisms causing phantom pain, and many theories highly overlap. Historically, phantom pains were thought to originate from neuromas located at the stump tip. [1]

  3. Balanced anesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balanced_anesthesia

    Achieving muscle paralysis is often necessary for certain surgical procedures. Depending on the procedure to be undertaken, blocking transmission of nociception (autonomic nervous system responses to noxious stimuli and its cardiac and hemodynamic effects – even in the absence of conscious pain perception), may be the aim of analgesia ...

  4. Mirror therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_therapy

    An occupational therapy assistant using mirror therapy to address phantom pain. Mirror therapy (MT) or mirror visual feedback (MVF) is a therapy for pain or disability that affects one side of the patient more than the other side. It was invented by Vilayanur S. Ramachandran to treat post-amputation patients who had phantom limb pain (PLP ...

  5. Nursing diagnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_diagnosis

    An example of a health promotion diagnosis is: Readiness for enhanced nutrition. Syndrome diagnosis A clinical judgment describing a specific cluster of nursing diagnoses that occur together, and are best addressed together and through similar interventions. An example of a syndrome diagnosis is: Relocation stress syndrome. [11]

  6. Patient-controlled analgesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient-controlled_analgesia

    Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA [1]) is any method of allowing a person in pain to administer their own pain relief. [2] The infusion is programmable by the prescriber. If it is programmed and functioning as intended, the machine is unlikely to deliver an overdose of medication. [3]

  7. Nursing Interventions Classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nursing_Interventions...

    The NIC provides a four level hierarchy whose first two levels consists of a list of 433 different interventions, each with a definition in general terms, and then the ground-level list of a variable number of specific activities a nurse could perform to complete the intervention.

  8. Health psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_psychology

    Health psychology attempts to find treatments to reduce or eliminate pain, as well as understand pain anomalies such as episodic analgesia, causalgia, neuralgia, and phantom limb pain. Although the task of measuring and describing pain has been problematic, the development of the McGill Pain Questionnaire [ 64 ] has helped make progress in this ...

  9. Dysesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysesthesia

    The dysesthetic tissue may also not be part of a limb, but part of the body, such as the abdomen. The majority of individuals with both phantom limb and dysesthesia experience painful sensations. [citation needed] Phantom pain refers to dysesthetic feelings in individuals who are paralyzed or who were born without limbs. It is caused by the ...