What is the peripheral nervous system?
This mostly eradicated disease can cause loss of motor function and musculoskeletal weakness and can reoccur in older age.
What is polio or post-polio syndrome?
This disease is classified by widespread musculoskeletal pain, along with tender points and fatigue.
What is fibromyalgia?
This describes a conglomeration of many nerves in one location.
What is a plexus?
This is the connection point between nerves.
What is a synapse?
This is the meaning of "sclerosis" in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
What is "hardening"?
This is the childhood variant associated with herpes zoster.
What is chickenpox?
This common condition uses "SNOOP" for assessing danger of occurrence.
What are headaches?
What is a cochlea?
What is the peripheral nervous system?
This disease involves loss of dopamine production and uptake, and causes a resting tremor, along with rigidity and changes to brain function.
What is Parkinson's?
This is the most common motor disability of childhood, resulting in brain damage affecting the motor areas of the brain.
What is cerebral palsy?
This is the name for skin-picking, which falls under the umbrella of obsessive compulsive disorder.
What is excoriation?
This is the aspect of a nerve cell which can be covered with myelin.
What is the axon?
Signals use this to cross the connection point between nerves.
What are neurotransmitters or electrical signals?
This disease describes tremors occurring on a multiplane field, rather than a fixed plane.
What is dystonia?
This is the name for idiopathic facial paralysis, typically occurring on one side of the face.
What is Bell's palsy?
Traumatic brain injury to the anterior aspect of the brain will result in these types of issues.
What is critical thinking, language, cognition, learning skills, memory, etc.?
This term describes changes to the structure of the central nervous system, leading to an increased risk of pain and dysfunction.
What is central sensitization?
This is the word for sticky blockages which occur in the cardiovascular and nervous system.
What is plaque?
This disease describes infection of the brain.
What is encephalitis?
This nerve pain occurs in one or more of the three branches of CN V, causing a painful tic.
What is trigeminal neuralgia?
This disorder affects a branch of CN VIII, leading it to malfunction, resulting in debilitating vertigo, which can last for seconds to many hours.
What is vestibular balance disorder?
This spot, which shares a name with a cervical vertebrae, is a communication point between the hypothalamus, pituitary, and adrenal glands and signals a feedback loop of hormones in response to the nervous system.
What is the HPA axis?
This is an example of a structural change to the anatomy that could affect the nerves.
Answer may vary. Could be: bone spurs, degeneration, pressure from tight muscles, etc.