It is an unpleasant sensation, such as sneezing, hissing, biting, heat or pain. The pain can be sharp or dull.

in hive-138294 •  4 years ago 


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It can come and go, or it can go on. You may feel pain in one part of your body such as your back, abdomen, chest, waist or you may feel pain all over your body.

Pain can help diagnose any problem. If you have never felt pain, you may injure yourself unknowingly, or you may not realize that you have a medical condition that needs treatment.

There are two types of pain: severe and chronic. Severe pain is usually the result of an illness, injury, or inflammation.

Usually it can be found and treated. It usually goes away, though it can sometimes turn into chronic pain.

Pain is not always curable, but there are many treatments.
There are treatments that involve pain treatment. There are also non-prescription drugs such as hemorrhage, sometimes physical therapy and surgery.

What exactly is pain?
Medically, pain is an uncomfortable feeling that often indicates an injury or illness. Often, pain is the body's way of telling you something.

That is the purpose of pain. It is designed to make you uncomfortable so if you are injured or sick you know you need to do something (or stop doing something).

Your brain usually begins to respond to pain when you do something that hurts your body.

When you touch something hot, the pain you feel is the way your body says you should stop touching the hot thing and take steps to cool the skin.

If you are walking with an injured ankle and it hurts, your body also tells you to stop.

The perception of pain can vary from person to person. One person may break a bone and not even see it, while another may experience severe pain from the same injury.

This is because this pain is transmitted by nerve fibers in your body and these nerve fibers are responsible for sending signals to the pain brain (which happens very quickly). Once they find their way to the brain, the brain works to alert you to the pain.

Since each person's body is different, their nerve fibers and their brain may respond differently to the same stimulus. It is helpful to explain why understanding pain and tolerance can make such a big difference from one person to another.

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