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face pain การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Somatosensory amplification and affective inhibition are elevated in myofascial face pain.
  • Once again a family that believed itself destined for greatness must face pain.
  • I am pleased that America has had to face pain, because the rest of the world has tasted its pain.
  • We often face pains and impasses in dealing with North Korea, but there can be no alternative to our sunshine policy,
  • Raphael, K . G . Marbach J . J ., Gallagher, R . M . Somatosensory Amplification and Affection Inhibition are Elevated in Myofascial Face Pain.
  • "I feel guilt for having dragged them into a situation where they had to face pain, torture, the brutality of the regime, " he said.
  • In an effort to get rid of her face pain, Baer said she tried everything, including a series of nerve-block injections into the nerves around her neck.
  • Raphael, K . G ., Marbach, J . J ., Klausner, J . Myofascial face pain : clinical characteristics of those with regional versus widespread pain.
  • He also warns her that the procedure is in its infancy and for a year Gwen will have to take shots to help her breathe every two hours and will face pain that won't go away.
  • Feminist groups and other critics say questions about long-term side effects when silicone gel leaks from the implants haven't yet been settled, and that at the least, women face pain and repeated surgeries when the implants break.
  • For instance, a 1989 study in " Headache : The Journal of Head and Face Pain " showed 64.5 % of 45 patients with migraine or migraine plus chronic daily headache evaluated use of a cold wrap for 20 to 30 minutes as mildly, moderately or completely effective.
  • Other topics were the behaviour of medical doctors, facing pain and death, sterilisation, genetics, artificial insemination, painless child birth, the multiple moral aspects of developing medical technologies, morality in applied psychology, moral limits to medical research and treatment, and cancer treatment of children, and more.
  • Over the years, our areas of ignorance have progressively narrowed . [ . . . ] A non-pejorative and, hopefully, reasonable term for the ever-narrowing group of undiagnosed face pain problems : Facepain of Obscure Etiology ( FOE or POE ) to replace atypical facial pain in the Burchiel classification . ""
  • :Dictionary . com has this to say : " Bite the bullet is first recorded 1891, probably with a sense of giving someone something to clench in the teeth during a painful operation . " And it goes on to say " Behave bravely or stoically when facing pain or a difficult situation, as in If they want to cut the budget deficit, they are going to have to bite the bullet and find new sources of revenue.