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1 ing were more prominent than was shooting or burning pain.
2 nic neuropathic symptoms than is shooting or burning pain.
3 uli, was involved in the development of this burning pain.
4 aesthesia, with some patients complaining of burning pain.
5 xious cold can paradoxically be perceived as burning pain.
6 numbness (17% v 5%; P = .005), and aching or burning pain (13% v 6%; P = .03) in toes/feet compared w
7 th the abrupt onset of generalized cutaneous burning pain and hyperesthesia.
8 EPP symptoms include light-induced cutaneous burning pain and occasional swelling, particularly over
9 ivated, these neurons evoke the sensation of burning pain and release neuropeptides that induce neuro
10 an ingredient in spicy peppers that produces burning pain by activating transient receptor potential
11 'hot' chilli peppers, elicits a sensation of burning pain by selectively activating sensory neurons t
12 l consumption is associated with spontaneous burning pain, hyperalgesia, and allodynia.
13 uctive functions, HE TRPV1 cells may mediate burning pain in chronic pain syndromes with perineal loc
14 ropathy (I-SFN), clinically characterized by burning pain in distal extremities and autonomic dysfunc
15 mplaints of recurrent redness, swelling, and burning pain in his left arm.
16 al dominant disorder characterized by severe burning pain in response to mild warmth, has been shown
17 autosomal dominant disorder characterized by burning pain in response to warm stimuli or moderate exe
18 thickening and fibrosis, is characterized by burning pain in the ball of the foot and numbness or bur
19 tosomal dominant neuropathy characterized by burning pain in the extremities in response to mild warm
20 autosomal dominant disorder characterized by burning pain in the extremities in response to warm stim
21 ited erythromelalgia (IEM), characterized by burning pain in the extremities; Na(V)1.7 mutations that
22 35-year-old male presented with erythema and burning pain in the hands since early childhood, later d
23  lymphedema-related symptoms, e.g., tension, burning pain, mobility loss, and warmth/redness, and HRQ
24 tburn should be considered when retrosternal burning pain or discomfort persists despite maximal (dou
25  and ligands such as capsaicin, leading to a burning pain sensation.
26 erve injury, with its persistent distal limb burning pain, swelling, and abnormal skin color, tempera
27 lth (P-value = 0.01), and those experiencing burning pain, tension, heaviness, or warmth/redness in t
28 pain in the ball of the foot and numbness or burning pain that may radiate to the affected toes (comm
29                          Symptoms range from burning pain to itching, also carrying substantial psych
30 yndrome characterized by episodes of intense burning pain triggered by warmth, is caused by mutations
31 nts with IEM suffer from episodes of intense burning pain triggered by warmth, the effects of increas
32     Cutaneous porphyria patients suffer from burning pain upon exposure to sunlight and other patient
33 tense acute flares of inflammation, itching, burning pain, vasodilatation, and redness of the extremi
34 ial pain syndrome characterized by episodic 'burning' pain, warmth, and erythema.
35           ATP consistently produced a modest burning pain, which began within 20 s of starting iontop