Difference between revisions of "Encrypted code: Hyperexcitability of the trigeminal system"

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[[File:Recovery cycle.jpeg|left|frameless|180x180px]]
[[File:Recovery cycle.jpeg|left|frameless|180x180px]]
The subject, a 32-year-old man affected by marked nocturnal and diurnal bruxism and Orofacial Pain (OP) prevalent in the temporoparietal regions, with greater intensity and frequency on the left side of the face, underwent the diagnostic model Masticationpedia which decrypted the machine language of the Central Nervous System in '(Hyperexcitability' of the Central Nervous System with particular reference to the midbrain trigeminal area. This 'Hyperexcitability' was verified through an electrophysiological method called 'Recovery Cycle of the Inhibitory Masseter Reflex' which highlighted an exaggerated recovery of the silent period evoked by the second electrical stimulus called 'Stimulus test'. This neurophysiological condition led the doctor to request an MRI of the brain which reports a 'Cavernosa Pineal. In conclusion, 'Bruxism' is a form of functional instability of neural excitability and/or organic, therefore, not to exclusively pertinent to dentistry. The continuation of the phenomenon, its intensification and stubbornness in managing it with dental treatments without investigating the 'state' of the system in more detail could be serious and have an unfavorable prognosis.
The subject, a 32-year-old man affected by marked nocturnal and diurnal bruxism and Orofacial Pain (OP) prevalent in the temporoparietal regions, with greater intensity and frequency on the left side of the face, underwent the diagnostic model Masticationpedia which decrypted the machine language of the Central Nervous System in '(Hyperexcitability' of the Central Nervous System with particular reference to the midbrain trigeminal area. This 'Hyperexcitability' was verified through an electrophysiological method called 'Recovery Cycle of the Inhibitory Masseter Reflex' which highlighted an exaggerated recovery of the silent period evoked by the second electrical stimulus called 'Stimulus test'. This neurophysiological condition led the doctor to request an MRI of the brain which reports a 'Cavernosa Pineal. In conclusion, 'Bruxism' is a form of functional instability of neural excitability and/or organic, therefore, not to exclusively pertinent to dentistry. The continuation of the phenomenon, its intensification and stubbornness in managing it with dental treatments without investigating the 'state' of the system in more detail could be serious and have an unfavorable prognosis.
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