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Hyperalgesia is a symptom that causes unusually severe pain in situations where feeling pain is normal, but the pain is much more severe than it should be. This condition happens because of disruptions or changes in how your nervous system processes pain.
Hyperalgesia is when you have extreme sensitivity to pain. If you have this condition, your body overreacts to painful stimuli, making you feel increased pain. You can develop...
Hyperalgesia is a condition where a person has an increased sensitivity and extreme response to pain. What may not hurt most people can cause severe pain in a person with...
Hyperalgesia is a condition in which you develop an increased sensitivity to pain. Hyperalgesia is believed to be the result of an allergic or inflammatory response.
Hyperalgesia (/ ˌhaɪpərælˈdʒiːziə / or /- siə /; hyper from Greek ὑπέρ (huper) 'over' + -algesia from Greek ἄλγος (algos) 'pain') is an abnormally increased sensitivity to pain, which may be caused by damage to nociceptors or peripheral nerves and can cause hypersensitivity to stimulus.
Having hyperalgesia means you experience pain that’s far more severe than expected. Hyperesthesia and hyperalgesia both connect to neuropathic pain and other pain syndromes.
What is hyperalgesia? Hyperalgesia is an enhanced pain response. It can result from either injury to part of the body or from use of opioid painkillers. When a person becomes more sensitive...
Hyperalgesia involves sensitisation of nociceptors altering the intensity of pain for given painful stimulus. Although allodynia and hyperalgesia are distinct clinical terms, they can and often do co-exist.
Hyperalgesia is a condition characterized by heightened sensitivity to pain, resulting in an increased response to normally painful stimuli and even pain in the absence of any stimulus. It can be caused by inflammation and is associated with the release of certain chemicals from non-neural tissues. About this page.
Hyperalgesia is a medical condition that causes an increased sensitivity to pain. Individuals with hyperalgesia experience pain when exposed to normal stimuli. They also experience worse pain, when exposed to painful stimuli, than someone who does not have the condition.