A stabbing pain below the clavicle above the right chest, also known as a pins-and-needles pain. If the pain lasts less than a second, or a few seconds, it is most often neuralgia. First of all, its location is not the typical location of our angina pectoris, which is mostly located on the left side of the chest, while the right side is relatively uncommon, and the location is also higher, below the clavicle. If the pain is persistent and severe, it is necessary to exclude local skin and soft tissue injury, rib or sternal injury, inflammation, rare tumor occupancy, and pleural inflammation of the pleura near this part. Some rare mesotheliomas and other occupations of the pleura, and lesions of the lung tissue near the pleura further in, can be investigated. However, if the pain is only 1-2 seconds of pins and needles, the most common pain is neuralgia, which does not require further treatment.