Neuroplastic Pain Self-Assessment

Dear Friend, Your results show a high likelihood of neuroplastic pain.

Your answers strongly suggest that your pain is consistent with neuroplastic pain. Now, make no mistake, my friend, this means your symptoms and your pain are absolutely real. However, they are most likely maintained by learned patterns in your subconscious brain and nervous system rather than caused by ongoing damage in the body.

What this means:

  • Pain that shifts, fluctuates, worsens under stress, or improves with distraction is a hallmark of neuroplastic pain.

  • Multiple unexplained symptoms (such as fatigue, headaches, stomach issues, or dizziness) often indicate nervous system involvement.

  • If doctors have struggled to find a clear structural or biological explanation, it doesn’t mean your pain is “in your head”! It means the pain is real, and the cause of the pain lies in how the brain is processing signals.

Encouragement:
This is actually hopeful news, you know. The same brain that can “learn” to produce pain can also unlearn it. With the right approach, many people experience dramatic improvements — sometimes even full recovery. Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) is designed to help you retrain your brain, calm your nervous system, and break the cycle of chronic pain.

Next step:

The good news is, you don’t have to keep living in this cycle. With Pain Reprocessing Coaching, we can work together step by step to help your brain feel safe again, reduce the danger signals it’s sending, and open the door to real relief.

🔄 If you wish, you can always retake the Assessment

👉 Book your free consultation today and take the first step toward lasting change

 

Disclaimer:
This assessment is not a medical diagnosis and does not replace professional medical care. It cannot determine the cause of your symptoms. Its purpose is to help you explore whether your symptoms display characteristics often associated with neuroplastic pain, which is real pain driven by learned neural pathways rather than ongoing tissue damage.
A thorough medical evaluation is an important first step. Structural, inflammatory, neurological, or other medical conditions should be assessed and ruled out as appropriate before focusing on neuroplastic pain mechanisms.