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  2. Referred Pain: What It Is, Causes, Treatment & Common Areas

    my.clevelandclinic.org/health/symptoms/25238-referred-pain

    Referred pain is when you have an injury in one area of your body but feel pain somewhere else. This happens because all the nerves in your body are part of a huge, connected network. Referred pain can occur anywhere, but it’s most common in your neck, shoulders, back, teeth and jaws.

  3. Referred Pain: Common Areas and What It Means - Healthline

    www.healthline.com/health/pain-relief/referred-pain

    Referred pain can be felt in your jaw, teeth, and shoulders. The pain occurs when your body starts to react to a blockage in your coronary arteries that can trigger a heart attack.

  4. Referred pain - Wikipedia

    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Referred_pain

    Referred pain is when the pain is located away from or adjacent to the organ involved; for instance, when a person has pain only in their jaw or left arm, but not in the chest.

  5. Referred Pain - Physiopedia

    www.physio-pedia.com/Referred_Pain

    Referred pain is pain perceived at a location other than the site of the painful stimulus/ origin. It is the result of a network of interconnecting sensory nerves, that supplies many different tissues.

  6. Referred Shoulder Pain: Symptoms, Causes, Treatment - WebMD

    www.webmd.com/pain-management/pain-referred-shoulder-pain

    Referred shoulder pain happens when the pain isn't caused by problems with your shoulder joint or with the muscles, ligaments, or tendons around it. Learn more about it.

  7. Myofascial pain syndrome - Symptoms and causes - Mayo Clinic

    www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/myofascial-pain...

    Myofascial pain syndrome is a long-term pain condition. It involves some muscles and the thin cover of tissue that holds muscles in place, called fascia. Pressure on these areas, called trigger points, causes pain. Sometimes, the pain is felt in other parts of the body. This is called referred pain.

  8. Hyperalgesia: What It Is, Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

    my.clevelandclinic.org/health/symptoms/23550

    Referred hyperalgesia. Referred pain is when you feel pain near the site of the actual problem, and referred hyperalgesia means that this pain is more intense. It happens because the area where you feel the pain shares nerve connections with the area that actually has the problem.

  9. Referred pain: characteristics, possible mechanisms, and ...

    www.frontiersin.org/journals/neurology/articles/10.3389...

    The term “referred pain” has been documented to describe pain spreading to the somatic regions far from the site of noxious stimulation (10), which is not caused by nerve root stimulation. Referred pain can be caused by autogenous dysfunction or triggered by external stimuli.

  10. What is Referred Pain and How Can You Treat it?

    www.princetonorthopaedic.com/what-is-referred-pain-and-how...

    Understanding referred pain is crucial in distinguishing symptoms and reaching accurate diagnoses, thereby informing appropriate treatment plans. Various conditions can cause referred pain, including inflammation, neck pain, back pain, and general illness.

  11. Referred Pain: Clinical Significance, Pathophysiology, and ...

    www.pmr.theclinics.com/article/S1047-9651(18)30348-6/pdf

    The term referred pain is classically used to indicate pain perceived in regions of the body other than the one whose stimulation caused the pain, that is, the structure in which the primary algogenic pathology takes place.19