Should you see a doctor if you have “pain”?

Pain (Pain) is a sensation and experience in the body accompanied by unpleasant emotional changes. This sensation and response is associated with the presence of definite or potential tissue damage in the body. Internationally, pain has become the fifth most important vital sign after body temperature, pulse, respiration and blood pressure. Pain can affect your mood, have an impact on your diet and sleep, and pain can inconvenience your family. Everyone would agree that the human body is capable of self-repair. Some diseases do not require treatment, and some are “self-limiting” – that is, they get better when the time comes. If you have pain and discomfort, is it better to carry it on or go to the hospital to see a doctor? I hope that if you encounter the following situations, it is advisable to go to the hospital! Intolerable pain Pain is a fire alarm from the body, do not challenge the pain. If you encounter unbearable pain, you should seek medical attention as soon as possible, such as headache, angina, chest pain, abdominal pain. It is important to note that even if you get to the hospital, usually the doctor will not give you immediate pain relief. Pain is a fire alarm and an important signal to know the condition of your body. Recurring pain Old pain, just put up with it – this is how most cancers pass through unmolested childhood. For recurring discomfort, one should pay careful attention to the triggering cause and the way to relieve it. The most important thing is one’s age. If you are older than 50, you’d better get it looked at to avoid future problems. If you are already in a certain disease process, but the pain sensation and location suddenly change, and your doctor may have told you that it is nothing and that you will get better on your own in a few days, and at the beginning, it felt better day by day, but today it suddenly worsens or changes, then it is better to go for another review. In addition to pain, accompanied by other symptoms Headache with nausea and vomiting suggests the possibility of cranial hypertension; pain in the precordial region with profuse sweating suggests the possibility of myocardial infarction; chest pain with coughing blood suggests the possibility of lung cancer; back pain with chills and fever and hematuria suggests the possibility of pyelonephritis and urinary tract stones. Warm reminder: when you are in pain, don’t put up with the pain, and don’t take painkillers and plasters indiscriminately; to say goodbye to pain as soon as possible, the most correct way is to come to the hospital and let us give you the most professional doctor’s guidance.