What Are the Symptoms of Paresthesia?

Paresthesia refers to the discomfort that patients often or intermittently feel in certain parts without external stimuli, such as ant walking, electric shock, tingling, heat or cold, acupuncture or electric shock, and so on. Often caused by sensory pathways. More common in peripheral nerve disease, spinal cord disease and brain disorders. [1]

feeling abnormal

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Paresthesia refers to the discomfort that patients often or intermittently feel in certain parts without external stimuli, such as ant walking, electric shock, tingling, heat or cold, acupuncture or electric shock, and so on. Often caused by sensory pathways. More common in peripheral nerve disease, spinal cord disease and brain disorders. [1]
Chinese name
feeling abnormal
Background
No external stimulus
which performed
Consciously feel uncomfortable in one part of the body
Classification
Endogenous discomfort
Paresthesia refers to the uncomfortable or unbearable strange feeling in a certain part of the body without external stimuli.
This kind of abnormal feeling is called internal perceptual discomfort if it occurs inside the body and the specific part of the discomfort cannot be specified precisely. Paresthesia is common in suspected concepts, depression, schizophrenia, and mental disorders after craniocerebral trauma. It can also occasionally occur in thromboocclusive vasculitis.

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