Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
She forced herself to look away, feeling a phantom pain in her own arm.
The thought brought back unpleasant phantom pains in my chest.
Until darkness fell and he had to wrestle with the phantom pain again.
Everything still felt attached, although she'd seen examples of phantom pain in blasted men.
"Phantom pain does get better," Tree comes to learn.
Echoes of that phantom pain still rolled through her. '
He remembered a time when he had not been so wise, and phantom pain shot through him.
People who are paralyzed often feel phantom pain from limbs and parts of their body that cannot have any sensation.
"Sometimes it has a phantom pain," came the terse reply.
Those were the bad times, for even laudanum had trouble dulling the phantom pain.
"It'd better," Lena told her, feeling phantom pains from the needle.
There's sometimes phantom pain, too, as if the missing limb or part were still there and injured."
Eventually, he learned to block the worst of the phantom pain caused by nerve induction.
"Evidence for the optimal management of acute and chronic phantom pain: a systematic review."
Phantom pain was one thing, tracking-sensor feedback was quite another.
I, too, had winced, my index finger stinging with phantom pain.
Women who have had a breast removed because of breast cancer may also feel phantom pain.
The prevalence of phantom pain after limb amputation ranged from 50% to 78%.
The doctor calls it "phantom pain" and leaves.
Phantom pain is pain felt in a part of the body that has been lost or from which the brain no longer receives signals.
Little is known about the true mechanism causing phantom pains, and many theories highly overlap.
It's a type of phantom pain or ghost pain.
She limped as a phantom pain shot up her leg, an echo of her other life.
Wolverine also admits to feeling phantom pains for weeks or months after healing from his injuries.