Look, your Results show moderate likelihood of neuroplastic pain.
Your answers show several features commonly seen in neuroplastic pain. This means, that your symptoms may not be fully explainable by structural issues alone. Instead, your nervous system may be sensitized, amplifying pain signals and keeping them active even after the body has healed.
What this means:
Pain that varies in location, intensity, or timing often points to the brain’s involvement.
Symptoms triggered by stress, emotions, or fatigue suggest your nervous system is playing a major role.
A combination of structural and neuroplastic factors is very common. You might have had an initial injury or physical problem, but now the nervous system is “holding on” to the pain pattern.
Encouragement:
Now, the good news is that neuroplastic pain is highly reversible. The same brain and nervous system that learned to generate and amplify pain can also learn to let it go. Scientific research and clinical practice show that people with similar profiles often experience significant improvement with approaches that target the mind-body connection.
I’d love to support you, my friend, in retraining your nervous system so it no longer misfires pain signals. Many clients in this range find lasting relief once they learn the tools of Pain Reprocessing Therapy.
If you wish, you can always retake the Assessment
Book a free first consultation to see if this approach is right for you
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.