Orofacial pain is a common complaint, affecting the lives of millions of people around the world. Chronic orofacial pain often constitutes a challenging diagnostic problem that can be complicated by psychosocial factors and typically requires multidisciplinary treatment approaches. The fundamental prerequisite for successful management of orofacial pain is an accurate diagnosis. Generating a differential diagnosis, which will ultimately lead to a definite diagnosis, requires thorough knowledge of the diagnostic range of orofacial pain. There is a vast array of orofacial pain categories including: (1) musculoskeletal, (2) neuropathic, (3) vascular, (4) neurovascular, (5) idiopathic, (6) pain caused by local, distant, or systemic pathology, and (7) psychogenic. This article presents the salient clinical features and the therapeutic approaches for the various subtypes of musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain. Musculoskeletal pain is the most prevalent orofacial pain, with temporomandibular disorders and tension-type headache being the main examples. Neuropathic pain develops secondary to neural injury and/or irritation and can be distinguished into episodic, including trigeminal neuralgia and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, as well as continuous, such as herpetic and postherpetic neuralgia, traumatic neuralgia, and Eagle’s syndrome.
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1 July 2005
Pain Management|
July 01 2005
Orofacial Pain—Part I: Assessment and Management of Musculoskeletal and Neuropathic Causes
Eleni Sarlani, DDS, PhD;
From the Department of Diagnostic Sciences and Pathology (Drs Sarlani and Balciunas) and the Department of Health Promotion and Policy (Dr Grace), Brotman Facial Pain Center, Dental School, University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Reprint requests to Eleni Sarlani, Assistant Professor, Brotman Facial Pain Center, Dental School, University of Maryland, 666 W. Baltimore Street, Room 2-A-15, Baltimore, MD 21201–1586 ([email protected]).
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Birute A. Balciunas, DDS, MSD;
Birute A. Balciunas, DDS, MSD
From the Department of Diagnostic Sciences and Pathology (Drs Sarlani and Balciunas) and the Department of Health Promotion and Policy (Dr Grace), Brotman Facial Pain Center, Dental School, University of Maryland, Baltimore.
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Edward G. Grace, DDS, MA
Edward G. Grace, DDS, MA
From the Department of Diagnostic Sciences and Pathology (Drs Sarlani and Balciunas) and the Department of Health Promotion and Policy (Dr Grace), Brotman Facial Pain Center, Dental School, University of Maryland, Baltimore.
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AACN Adv Crit Care (2005) 16 (3): 333–346.
Citation
Eleni Sarlani, Birute A. Balciunas, Edward G. Grace; Orofacial Pain—Part I: Assessment and Management of Musculoskeletal and Neuropathic Causes. AACN Adv Crit Care 1 July 2005; 16 (3): 333–346. doi:
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