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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study investigated prospectively the illness behaviour of 100 patients with temporo-mandibular (
TMJ
) dysfunction and 100 asymptomatic patients. It has previously been shown that a simple illness behaviour questionnaire (IBQ) can discriminate between patients with intractable facial pain and minor odontogenic pain [28]. The purpose of this study was to determine whether it was possible to prospectively identify those patients who may be resistant to conservative therapy. The results showed that the
TMJ
dysfunction patients had significantly increased levels of disease conviction (P less than 0.001), anxiety or
depression
(P less than 0.005), and were less likely to deny the existence of problems in their life (P less than 0.05) compared to control patients. However, the
TMJ
population was much closer to the control population than to a pain clinic population. In the small percentage (13%) of patients who failed to respond to conservative therapy, over half showed abnormal illness behaviour. Seventy-five percent of all the
TMJ
patients could be excluded from further assessment of abnormal illness behaviour at little risk of incorrect classification. Thus the illness behaviour questionnaire can be used as a screening device to identify those patients who require psychologic treatment rather than more aggressive surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Temporo-mandibular joint dysfunction: pain and illness behaviour. 664 93
Temporomandibular joint dysfunction
is multifactorial in etiology. In many patients, psychological factors contribute to the development of symptoms. This is a retrospective study of 25 patients who had
temporomandibular joint dysfunction
and facial pain as an early sign of significant primary psychopathology. The diagnoses were: acute
depression
, manic-depressive illness, hysteria, and schizophrenia. Diagnosis of the underlying psychopathology and recognition of its role in the etiology of temporomandibular joint symptoms permitted more effective treatment.
...
PMID:Temporomandibular joint dysfunction: an occasional manifestation of serious psychopathology. 694 52
Depression
, anhedonia, state anxiety (A-state), trait anxiety (A-trait), and self-reported pain estimate were measured in almost 500 facial pain patients. These patients were divided into 3 diagnostic categories: myofacial pain dysfunction syndrome (MPD) [18], arthritis of the temporomandibular joints (
TMJ
arthritis), and trigeminal neuralgia. Three control groups were measured for comparison. They consisted of an normal, or non-patient group, a group of arthritis patients, and a group of movement disorder patients attending a neurology clinic. Among the facial pain patients and the normal controls few differences were found with regard to anhedonia and
depression
, The arthritis and neurology patients produced significantly higher
depression
and anhedonia scores than did several of the facial pain groups. Pain estimate ranged from 0 for control, to a mean of 67.6 +/- 31.3 for the trigeminal neuralgia patients with the MPD (means = 56.2 +/- 32.5) and the
TMJ
arthritis patients (means = 46.7 +/- 30.8) somewhat lower. Clinical variables such as duration of pain, help seeking behavior and total number of symptoms were correlated with
depression
but not with anhedonia scores, It is hypothesized that anhedonia is a measure separate from
depression
and may be more closely linked to suffering behavior that to pain behavior. Psychological variables did not discriminate among facial pain patients and in particular did not distinguish between so-called functional and organic illness.
...
PMID:Depression, anhedonia and anxiety in temporomandibular joint and other facial pain syndromes. 730 2
The construct validity of the
TMJ
Scale was examined in a sample of chronic post-traumatic headache patients. Clinical indicators of temporomandibular (TM) dysfunction and measures of psychosocial distress were compared with relevant scales of the
TMJ
Scale. The clinical indicators were first subjected to principal components analysis. The resulting factor scores correlated significantly with selected physical domain scales of the
TMJ
Scale. The factor scores also significantly predicted the
TMJ
Global Scale in a regression analysis. Selected psychosocial domain scales of the
TMJ
Scale correlated strongly with measures of
depression
and anger and a clinical diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder. The results support the validity of the
TMJ
Scale and demonstrates its utility with post-traumatic headache patients.
...
PMID:Evidence for construct validity of the TMJ scale in a sample of chronic post-traumatic headache patients. 781 31
Temporal arteritis is an insidious disease which, if not recognized and treated with high-dosage oral prednisone or intravenous prednisolone, can result in unilateral or even total blindness due to anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (AION) or closure of the central artery of the retina. Unfortunately, the symptoms and clinical signs of temporal arteritis mimic those of a number of other conditions including angle-closure glaucoma, hypertension, migraine, trigeminal neuralgia,
temporomandibular joint syndrome
, carotid artery occlusive disease, Foster-Kennedy syndrome, and nonarteritic AION. When a patient complains of a severe pain in the temporal region, along with scalp tenderness and a feeling of malaise or
depression
--with or without episodes of transient loss of vision--he or she should be referred for a diagnostic work-up which includes an erythrocyte sedimentation rate and a temporal artery biopsy. We present here a review of the recent literature concerning temporal arteritis, followed by a report of an unusual case in which high-dosage prednisone therapy was effective in relieving the patient's symptoms and lowering the sedimentation rate in spite of a negative temporal artery biopsy.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and management of temporal arteritis: a review and case report. 823 73
This article analyzes the authors' experience with the temporal myofascial flap in orbital, maxillary, floor of the mouth, tongue, retromolar trigone, and buccal mucosa reconstruction after oncologic surgery. Thirty-eight patients were treated and evaluated after using this technique. Four of the patients received the flap to restore orbital defects; the other 34 flaps were used in oral reconstruction. The flap remained viable in all instances. Most of the patients experienced no perioperative complications. Ten patients (29.4%) with flaps transposed to the oral cavity showed partial wound dehiscence. Two patients experienced
temporomandibular joint dysfunction
, two severe reduction in the oral aperture, 22 had mild
depression
of the temporal fossa, and four had mild to severe alteration in the facial aesthetics secondary to bone resection. All flaps transposed to the oral cavity showed good epithelialization and adaptation to the recipient site.
...
PMID:The temporalis muscle flap: an evaluation and review of 38 cases. 829 48
Variable blood pressure responses, manifesting either as a "white-coat" phenomenon or lability between office visits, confound hypertension management decisions. An attempt was made to determine whether these phenomena are associated with concurrent diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction, therefore mitigating against antihypertensive medical therapy. Forty-seven patients with such variable blood pressure responses were identified in a rural family practice over a three-year period and compared to randomly selected age- and sex-matched controls for the following concurrent diagnoses: generalized anxiety, psychogenic spastic bladder, panic disorder,
depression
, alcohol use, chronic headache, fibromyalgia,
temporomandibular joint syndrome
, irritable bowel syndrome, and premenstrual syndrome. No statistical associations between white-coat hypertension and these diagnoses were demonstrated although a small sample size tempers conclusions. However, chi-square analysis (P < 0.01) of the phenomenon characterized by lability of blood pressure between different office visits demonstrated a statistical association with alcoholic hepatitis in men. White-coat hypertension is a diagnosis that may warrant disassociation from other psychosocial disorders, although further study is indicated. Physicians should remain attuned to the presence of lability of blood pressure in males and consider possible associations with alcoholism.
...
PMID:A pilot study of white-coat and labile hypertension: associations with diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction. 848 44
Psychosocial factors have been frequently suggested as important risk factors that may delay recovery in patients with temporomandibular disorders. In this study, 94 subjects with chronic temporomandibular disorders were studied using IMPATH:
TMJ
prior to their entering an interdisciplinary treatment program to determine which factors were most predictive of outcome. Treatment outcome was determined based on significant decreases in the Craniomandibular Index and the Symptom Severity Index from pretreatment to posttreatment. The IMPATH:
TMJ
items were regressed on treatment outcome for a random sample of half of the subjects (n = 47) to isolate the psychosocial and demographic items most predictive of treatment response. Discriminant analysis was then employed to test the predictive utility of the identified items for these subjects (criterion group), followed by a cross-validation of the items on the remaining 47 subjects (cross-validation group). Low self-esteem, feeling worried, low energy, and sleep activity were identified as useful predictors of treatment outcome for the criterion group. Each are correlates of
depression
. The discriminant analysis employing these four items accounted for 49% of the variance in treatment response, was statistically significant (P < .0001), and correctly predicted treatment outcome for 41 of 47 subjects (87%) in the criterion group. The predictive utility of the identified items remained statistically significant when applied to the cross-validation group (P < .01). The discriminant function employing the items correctly predicted treatment outcome for 37 of 47 subjects (79%) and explained 28% of the variance in treatment response. Findings of this study suggest that pretreatment psychosocial information is important in predicting treatment outcome for chronic temporomandibular disorders, and that symptoms of
depression
mediate treatment response for chronic pain patients.
...
PMID:Predictors of outcome for treatment of temporomandibular disorders. 899 17
It is generally recognized that psychological factors play an important role in chronic orofacial pain patients. This study analysed psychological profiles of chronic pain patients affected with temporomandibular disorders (TMD), by means of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) test. Fifty consecutive TMD patients were examined and were then divided into two subgroups: 1. myofascial pain and 2. temporomandibular joint articular disorders. Sixty-two percent of the whole sample presented pathological MMPI scores. Both subgroups presented similar profiles with alteration of the neurotic triad (hypochondriasis,
depression
, hysteria), and pathological values of hypochondriasis and hysteria ("V" configuration). Since the personality profile did not differ between the two subgroups investigated, it was not dependent on the dysfunctional origin of the pathology (myalgia or primary
TMJ
pathology). Chronic TMD patients presented personality characteristics similar to those of other chronic pain patients according to the MMPI.
...
PMID:Personality characteristics of temporomandibular disorder patients using M.M.P.I. 970 66
A 1:1 matched case control study was carried out in 81 cases with
temporomandibular joint dysfunction
syndrome (TMJDS) who came to a
TMJ
clinic of a tertiary dental centre for help and 81 controls without TMJDS to investigate the association between psychosocial factors and TMJDS. The results showed that anxiety and
depression
might be one of the risk factors of TMJDS. Trait anxiety and Eysenck's neuroticism might be the inherent personality factor of anxiety, and the later might be the basis of
depression
. Life events and social support might be the external factors of TMJDS.
...
PMID:[Matched case control study for investigating of the association between psychosocial factors and TMJDS]. 1148 56
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