Nerve

Acute

What is Nerve?

Nerves are like cables that carry electrical impulses between your brain and the rest of your body. These impulses help you feel sensations and move your muscles. They also maintain certain autonomic functions like breathing, sweating or digesting food. Nerve cells are also called neurons.

  • A feeling of numbness, pain, tingling, or burning in your limbs or extremities.
  • Unexplained weakness, loss of muscle strength, or paralysis.
  • A headache that is persistent, comes on suddenly, or is "different"
  • Problems with coordination.
  • Shooting pain down one leg.
  • pain, numbness, and tingling of hands and feet.
  • muscle weakness such as trouble climbing stairs.
  • nausea and vomiting.
  • dizziness and lightheadedness.
  • an injury to your brain, spine or nerves.
  • poor blood supply to your nerves.
  • heavy alcohol use.
  • phantom pain after an amputation.
  • vitamin B12 or thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency.
  • medicines.

Genetics may increase your risk of developing a pinched nerve. Traumatic injury: A fall, accident, or sports injury increases your risk of developing a pinched nerve. Poor posture: How you sit, stand, and walk affects the pressure on your spine and nerves.

These factors can include repetitive motions, exposure to toxic chemicals, smoking and drinking too much alcohol.

How is it diagnosed?

How is it diagnosed?

Nerve pain can be difficult to treat, but there are many strategies you can try. Treating the underlying cause, if there is one, is the first step. Pain relief and other medicines can help, as can non-drug treatments such as exercise, acupuncture and relaxation techniques.

How is it treated?

Treatment for acute myeloid leukemia is vital. It varies with the patient and stage of the disease. Treatment options include

During this procedure, your surgeon takes a healthy piece of nerve from another location on your body and uses it to reconnect the two ends of the damaged nerve. Generally, an overnight hospital stay is required for this procedure. After surgery, mobility is often limited for three weeks using a sling, brace or splint.

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