Difference between revisions of "Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC)"

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| en = Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC)
| it = Criteri diagnostici di ricerca (RDC)
| fr = Critères diagnostiques de recherche (RDC)
| de = Forschungsdiagnostische Kriterien (RDC)
| es = Criterios de Diagnóstico de Investigación (RDC)
| pt = <!-- portoghese -->
| ru = <!-- russo -->
| pl = <!-- polacco -->
| fi = <!-- finlandese/suomi -->
| ca = <!-- catalano -->
| ja = <!-- giapponese -->
}}
{{ArtBy|autore=Gianni Frisardi}}A frequent feature of orofacial pain is the multifactorial nature of the pathology which makes the diagnosis even more complex. The Temporo Mandibular Disorders (TMD), for example, which the Anglo-Saxon countries call with various terminologies such as Temporo-Mandibular Disorders (TMDs), Cranio Facial Pain (CFP) and Temporo-Mandibular Joint Dysfunction (TMJ dysfunction), sometimes present diagnostic difficulties. The orofacial pain caused by DTM is often superimposed, as symptoms and clinical signs, on pain disorders that can be a manifestation of other forms of headache in which organic neurological-systemic pathologies can coexist. This clinical picture can make differential diagnosis difficult at least in the early stages of the disease.<ref>Sollecito T.P., Richardson R.M., Quinn P.D., Cohen G.S.:. Intracranial schwannoma as atypical facial pain. Case report. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol. 1993;76:153-6 </ref><ref>Shankland W.E.: Trigeminal neuralgia: typical or atypical? Cranio. 1993;11:108-12. </ref><ref>Graff-Radford S.B., Solberg W.K.: Is atypical odontalgia a psychological problem? Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol. 1993;75:579-82.</ref><ref>Ruelle A., Datti R., Andrioli G.: Cerebellopontine angle osteoma causing trigeminal neuralgia: case report.Neurosurgery. 1994;35:1135-7.</ref>  
{{ArtBy|autore=Gianni Frisardi}}A frequent feature of orofacial pain is the multifactorial nature of the pathology which makes the diagnosis even more complex. The Temporo Mandibular Disorders (TMD), for example, which the Anglo-Saxon countries call with various terminologies such as Temporo-Mandibular Disorders (TMDs), Cranio Facial Pain (CFP) and Temporo-Mandibular Joint Dysfunction (TMJ dysfunction), sometimes present diagnostic difficulties. The orofacial pain caused by DTM is often superimposed, as symptoms and clinical signs, on pain disorders that can be a manifestation of other forms of headache in which organic neurological-systemic pathologies can coexist. This clinical picture can make differential diagnosis difficult at least in the early stages of the disease.<ref>Sollecito T.P., Richardson R.M., Quinn P.D., Cohen G.S.:. Intracranial schwannoma as atypical facial pain. Case report. Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol. 1993;76:153-6 </ref><ref>Shankland W.E.: Trigeminal neuralgia: typical or atypical? Cranio. 1993;11:108-12. </ref><ref>Graff-Radford S.B., Solberg W.K.: Is atypical odontalgia a psychological problem? Oral Surg Oral Med Oral Pathol. 1993;75:579-82.</ref><ref>Ruelle A., Datti R., Andrioli G.: Cerebellopontine angle osteoma causing trigeminal neuralgia: case report.Neurosurgery. 1994;35:1135-7.</ref>  


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