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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report data on abdominal pain and depression from a survey of Hispanic Americans by the United States National Center for Health Statistics. The point prevalence rates of chronic abdominal pain were 4.6% in Mexican Americans and 5.8% in Cuban Americans in a total of 4175 subjects. The rate was 8.3% among 1323 Puerto Ricans. In 53% the abdominal pain came in waves. Using the Depression scale of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies (CES-D), 18.7% of Mexican and Cuban Americans with pain were found to be depressed to an extent likely to require intervention, and 40.8% of Puerto Ricans were so affected. The Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS) gave more conservative figures for major depression in terms of DSM-III, viz., 6.8% for Mexican and Cuban Americans with chronic pain, and 12.6% for Puerto Ricans with chronic pain. Logistic regression analyses demonstrated links between depression and female sex, the single state, low education and income, and chronic abdominal pain. The most consistent relationships for depression were with chronic pain, female sex and the single state. The results confirm the strong relationships between chronic pain, mood and female gender, and other socio-demographic variables.
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PMID:Chronic abdominal pain and depression. Epidemiologic findings in the United States. Hispanic Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. 159 84

Major depression disease is uncommon in children; it occurs mostly in children with a depressed parent or in children under major psychosocial stress such as physical or sexual abuse. Most depression in children is masked, i.e., the child presents with signs or symptoms such as headaches, abdominal pain, muscle weakness, vomiting, dizziness, hyperactivity, or school avoidance. Careful evaluation of the history is required to assist in the diagnosis. Some basic laboratory tests should be done to rule out organic disease. Psychiatric referral should be carried out after an appropriate evaluation.
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PMID:Depression and chronic fatigue in children. A masquerade ball. 187 11

The reduction of pain by two antidepressants, clomipramine and mianserin, was, in this study on 253 patients with chronic idiopathic pain syndrome, found to be not better than a placebo when all patients were compared independently of the classification of pain. The improvement rate was around 40% after 6 weeks of treatment when using a 50% or better reduction in pain level. However, in patients who fulfilled a checklist definition of minor to major depression (30% of the total patient material) clomipramine was superior to mianserin and placebo with an improvement rate of 75% after 6 weeks. Using pain curves over time as outcome measure in the various clinical pain categories it was found that both mianserin and clomipramine seemed superior to placebo in patients with tension headache, but in patients with low back pain syndrome placebo was superior to the two antidepressants. No difference among the three treatments was found in patients with burning mouth syndrome or in patients with abdominal pain. These differences underline the importance of studying specific pain syndromes rather than composite groups of patients with idiopathic pain. The clinical significance of these pain curves needs further placebo controlled investigations.
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PMID:Clomipramine and mianserin in chronic idiopathic pain syndrome. A placebo controlled study. 250 94

Psychoanalytic observation has launched a long tradition in medical literature that links constipation with obsessive-compulsive traits. This association, however, has never been tested empirically. The current investigation sought to test this hypothesized association empirically using a large, randomly sampled population database. Data from the Epidemiologic Catchment Area project collected with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule were analyzed to determine the association, if any, of complaint of medically unexplained constipation (ascertained from the somatization disorder section of the interview) with a DIS diagnosis of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). Reported history of constipation was significantly associated with a lifetime diagnosis of OCD in women (not men), even when controlling for symptom-reporting biases using number of other positive somatoform symptoms. This association was specific to constipation and OCD and did not apply to other functional bowel symptoms including diarrhea, bloating (gas), and abdominal pain. Other psychiatric disorders commonly implicated with functional bowel complaints--major depression and panic disorder--were not significantly associated with constipation controlling for effects of other somatoform symptoms. The lack of association of constipation with OCD in men in a general population sample fails to support psychoanalytic concepts that historically have linked these two phenomena, but a special relationship of OCD with constipation was present in women.
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PMID:Complaints of constipation in obsessive-compulsive disorder. 855 95

The author report a case of Capgras' syndrome in a 12-years-old girl, who had been hospitalized for attacks of abdominal pain. These symptoms had gone on for two years and led twice to surgical interventions which did not find any organic etiology. Interviews with the girl showed that the abdominal pains were related to symptoms of typical panic attacks which lasted about 20 minutes. In some on them, she experienced multiple autoscopy and the "illusion des sosies", described by Capgras. Long-term evolution showed that Capgras' syndrome disappeared with improvement of the panic attacks, but ten years later the patient is still suffering from generalized anxiety. To our knowledge, no case, even in adult patients, was previously described in the context of panic attacks. Furthermore, Capgras' syndrome is particularly rare at adolescence. Our review of literature exhibits only 19 cases under 18. Diagnosis was available in 16 cases, and consisted of schizophrenia or schizophreniform psychosis in 62.5% of the cases. The others involved acute psychosis (2 cases), post-partum psychosis (1 case), drug-induced-psychosis (1 case), psychotic major depression (1 case), and post-varicella encephalitis (1 case). The doubles (out of the 15 cases where relevant detail is available) included at least a parent in 92.9% of patients, a brother or sister in 35.7%, a member of the medical team in 21.4% and a grand-parent in 14.3%.
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PMID:[Capgras syndrome in adolescence: a review apropos of one case]. 867 74

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common and potentially disabling functional gastrointestinal disorder characterized by abdominal pain and altered bowel patterns. A significant amount of clinical and research data suggest the importance of the brain-gut interaction in IBS. This review examines the observed high prevalence of psychiatric disorders in patients with IBS. The published literature indicates that fewer than half of individuals with IBS seek treatment for it. Of those who do, 50% to 90% have psychiatric disorders, including panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, social phobia, posttraumatic stress disorder, and major depression, while those who do not seek treatment tend to be psychologically normal. Both physiologic and psychosocial variables appear to play important roles in the development and maintenance of IBS. Recent information suggests that the association of IBS and psychiatric disorders may be more fundamental than was previously believed. A brain-gut model for IBS is presented, and the role of traumatic stress and corticotropin-releasing factor as modulators of the brain-gut loop is discussed. Finally, the rationale for the use of psychotropic agents in the treatment of IBS with or without psychiatric symptoms is presented.
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PMID:Irritable bowel syndrome, anxiety, and depression: what are the links? 1210 20

It has recently been noted that screening for depression can improve clinical outcomes. The purpose of the present study was to examine whether somatic symptoms reported at health examinations predicted depression in the following year. Subjects were 1066 Japanese workers (732 men, mean age 35 years) attending annual health examinations at an institute in two successive years. A self-administered questionnaire including items of 12 major somatic symptoms was given to all the subjects. Then clinical interviews of the DSM-IV were used to diagnose major depression and minor depression in both years. In addition, the 17-item Hamilton Depression Scale (HDS-17) was measured as one of the outcomes of depression in the following year. The prevalence of major (minor) depression was 3.7 (7.8)% at baseline and 3.4 (5.9)% for the following year, respectively. The following year's HDS-17 scores were higher (all P < 0.05) in those who had complained of each somatic symptom at baseline than in those who had not. Three somatic symptoms (low back pain, dizziness, and abdominal pain) at baseline were significant risk factors of major depression for the following year. Dizziness at baseline significantly predicted major and minor depression for the following year as well. Somatic symptoms may be good predictors to screen for depression at health examination.
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PMID:Somatic symptoms for predicting depression: one-year follow-up study in annual health examinations. 1659 47

Depression is one of the most prevalent mental disorders, according to Hungarian and international data. In Western- Europe, lifetime prevalence of major depression is 13%, while one-year prevalence is 4%. The prevalence of severe depressive symptoms is similar in Hungary: approximately 5 to 8% of all patients seen by primary care physicians suffer from some kind of depressive disorders. Depression is more prevalent in women and in the elderly. According to the World Health Organization, depression is the third most common disabling disorder. Patients with depression experience impaired quality of life, anxiety, sleep disturbances, alcohol and drug abuse, and different somatic disorders. Furthermore, depression is the most important risk factor for suicide. Primary care physicians have a crucial role in the screening and diagnosing of depressive disorders. Depressive disorders can exist not only in patients complaining about depressed mood, but also in patients with "medically unexplained symptoms" (headache, fatigue, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal symptoms, weight change). Primary care physicians should have appropriate knowledge about the different therapeutic options (including various psychotherapies, antidepressant medications and other treatment options) to be able to treat their patients properly. We review the literature about the significance and epidemiology of depression and summarize the diagnostic and therapeutic options of depressive disorders in primary care practice.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of depression in family practice]. 1970 83

In recent years, many cases have been published about the appearance of a specific syndrome after the suspension or the sharp reduction in dose of antidepressants. Most of the reports and records relating to the very short half-life SSRI paroxetina. The following work intended to investigate the syndrome, its impact and its correlation with some parameters: age, sex, diagnosis, time of taking and antidepressant drug, therapeutic compliance, suspension and symptoms. The study, lasting approximately 6 months, was conducted with 148 outpatient, all treated with paroxetine.This paper highlights how the discontinuation syndrome is rare in individuals who received antidepressant treatment for short periods, and how it is, rather, much more common in cases of depression NAS, followed by panic attacks, compared with case of major depression. A positive correlation seems to be also with sex (having observed that go more frequently to meet withdrawal symptoms subjects male), and with age, patients being young adults between 35 and 55 years. The symptoms reported were very similar among all patients: headache, dizziness, abdominal pain and perineal, elevated pressure, anxiety, depersonalization and derealization, nightmares. Interestingly, the total absence of symptoms related to the original diagnosis of the disorder. Going to investigate the causal event for the emergence of the discontinuation syndrome, it was possible to divide the cases examined in three categories: independent suspension without medical opinion, suspension accelerated (both conditions due to outpatients) and finally patients that, although they had followed all the guidelines for suspension of the drug, had gone to meet equally symptoms. The syndrome can be prevented reducing very gradually the antidepressant dosage, while if there are symptoms it is indicated to reintroduce the drug and then scale or replance it with a different molecule.
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PMID:[SSRI discontinuation syndrome: incidence and differences on three groups of patients treated with paroxetine]. 2006 3

According to the analysis in pediatrics, 5.8% of children aged equal or more than 3 years attended pediatric outpatient clinics had psychosomatic problems. The logistic regression analysis demonstrated that children with psychosomatic problems had complained more chronic fatigue (odds ratio: 2.55), headache (2.42) and recurrent abdominal pain(2.03) in comparison with controls. The other study showed many children with school phobia had trouble with class mates and complained somatoform disorders. Working with somatizing patients and their parents can be frustrating the pediatrician, and comorbid psychiatric disorders are common in these patients. To get good carryover, the psychiatric consult is needed if they have suffered from major depressive disorder, and other anxiety disorders.
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PMID:[Care continuity for children with psychosomatic disorders]. 2007 98


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