Stabbing pain is a relatively mild pain that has its own specific symptom experience and a number of pathogenic factors, as well as pathogenesis. The symptoms of stabbing pain are milder than other pain sensations. The pain is generally tolerable and not excruciating. The attacks are usually of a continuous nature and intermittent attacks are rare. The pain is generally described as sharp, burning, irritating, penetrating pain. The pain is often associated with trauma, inflammation, and internal organ disease, and can be felt in the stomach, chest, head, back, hands, legs, and joints, and is often described by the patient as a painful pinch in these areas. Stabbing pain also occurs more often in trauma, where sharp objects and foreign bodies enter the superficial and deep parts of the body, and other trauma-induced ligament injuries and tendon injuries can also cause stabbing pain. Pneumothorax disease in the chest can occur as stabbing pain in the early stages when the pleural irritation is not heavy, because the nerve irritation is not heavy. Some deep gastric ulcers and gastritis can also occur as stabbing pains of a less severe degree due to gastric acid irritation. Stabbing pain occurs mainly as an acute painful discomfort. Acute pain is mainly injurious and is usually caused by irritation of peripheral receptors as well as by stimulation of nerve endings. Some stabbing pains, because of the possible long duration of the disease, will present a chronic attack. The pathogenesis of stabbing pain in this condition is neuropathic, caused by abnormal transmission of pain impulses in the spinal cord and brain. When stabbing pain occurs, the cause of the disease needs to be clarified and the necessary treatment given. Only after the disease causing the tingling pain is treated will the tingling pain be relieved or disappear.