Is in that a difference between "pain" and "tenderness"?
I'd like to hear from medical providers in how you use these expressions. To us lay people, they seem more or smaller number synonymous I think. However, I'm realizing I've see them written about and heard them used surrounded by ways that suggest they may be distinct descriptors for health care providers. So do you clear a distinction, and if so, what is the nature of it?
Answer: You can have anguish without tenderness and you can enjoy tenderness without distress. Example? After you pass kidney stones, which is extremely painful, for frequent days you will feel extremely tender in the nouns. So if you were to lay flat on your back and I get my hands and pressed real unyielding down on your abdomen, chances are you would run ouch! Pain! If I kept repeating this, you would got ouch, ouch. The day after, you would touch very tender, but not in headache.
The nature of it, kidney stones have to travel from the kidney to the toilet via a small tube, and contained by doing the travel they tend to inflame the small tube. Once you have passed them into the toilet, the pain will be gone. However the following two days every time you budge for a number one, you will feel it, as in pain, whereas when you normally go to a number one you do not quality it.
I always think the best description of pain is anything that involves inflammation, the difference between a deep cut and a cat scratch. Best of Luck.
I guess pain is something that hurts, without touching it...but discomfort is something that hurts slightly when touched.