Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In clinical practice, patients can present with many different diseases, often both somatic and mental. Holistic medicine will try to see the diseases as a whole, as symptoms of a more fundamental imbalance in the state of being. The holistic physician must help the patient to recover existence and a good relationship with self. According to the life mission theory, theory of character, and holistic process theory of healing, recovering the purpose of life (the life mission) is essential for the patient to regain life, love, and trust in order to find happiness and realize the true purpose of life. We illustrate the power of the holistic medical approach with a case study of an invalidated female artist, aged 42 years, who suffered from multiple severe health problems, many of which had been chronic for years. She had a combination of neurological disturbances (
tinnitus
, migraine, minor hallucinations), immunological disturbances (recurrent herpes simplex, phlegm in the throat, fungal infection in the crotch), hormonal disturbances (14 days of menstruation in each cycle), muscle disturbances (neck tensions), mental disturbances (tendency to cry, inferiority feeling, mild
depression
, desolation, anxiety), abdominal complaints, hemorrhoids, and more. The treatment was a combined strategy of improving the general quality of life, recovering her human character and purpose of life ("renewing the patients life energy", "balancing her global information system"), and processing the local blockages, thus healing most of her many different diseases in a treatment using 30 h of intense holistic therapy over a period of 18 months.
...
PMID:Clinical holistic medicine: the patient with multiple diseases. 1596 99
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role and interaction of individual factors on decompensated
tinnitus
. Subjects consisted of 53 adult patients with chronic
tinnitus
. They were selected and assigned to two groups, compensated (n = 28) and decompensated (n = 25), according to the results of an established
tinnitus
questionnaire. Both groups were evaluated and compared. The patients with decompensated
tinnitus
suffered from more pronounced social disabilities, were more prone to
depression
, and used less effective techniques to cope with their illness. They showed a higher degree of somatic multimorbidity, with particularly strong correlations between
tinnitus
and the incidence of cardiovascular diseases and hypoacusis. As a consequence, in the psychosomatic
tinnitus
therapy, greater attention should be given to the treatment of the somatic complaints in addition to psychological and psychosocial aspects.
...
PMID:Evidence of psychosomatic influences in compensated and decompensated tinnitus. 1607 32
Evaluation of the prevalence and characteristics of
tinnitus
in a Brazilian series of sleep bruxism patients. In this descriptive study, 100 patients (80 women and 20 men) were selected through the self-report of grinding teeth during sleep, confirmed by room mate or family member. They were evaluated according to a systematized approach: a questionnaire for orofacial pain and the Portuguese version of the Research Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders. The patients were divided into two groups: group A, 54 patients with complaint of
tinnitus
and group B, 46 patients without
tinnitus
complaint. The mean age was 37.85 (13-66 years) and 34.02 years (20-59 years), respectively, for groups A and B (P = 0.1164). There was statistically significant difference between the two groups, with higher prevalence for the group A, in relation to: presence of chronic facial pain (P = 0.0007); number of areas painful to palpation in the masticatory and cervical muscles (P = 0.0032); myofascial pain in the masticatory muscles (P = 0.0003); absence of teeth without prosthetic replacement (P = 0.0145) and indices of
depression
(P = 0.0234). Structural alterations of the TMJ, like disc displacement and vertical dimension loss did not differ for the two groups.
Tinnitus
frequency was higher in patients with sleep bruxism and chronic facial pain. Myofascial pain, number of areas painful to palpation in the masticatory and cervical muscles, higher levels of
depression
and tooth absence without prosthetic replacement were more frequent in the group with
tinnitus
.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of tinnitus in patients with sleep bruxism: prevalence and characteristics. 1620 44
In this paper the application of computer technology and the use of the Internet in mental health care are critically reviewed. A number of on-line screening devices have been developed for anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and substance abuse disorders, with great potential for clinical practice. On line assessment is generally equivalent to clinical assessment. A number of studies have shown that self-help treatment programmes on stand-alone computers are as effective as routine clinical care. The Internet enhances the therapeutic possibilities of computers by offering feedback of therapists and more tailor-made treatment. A number of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) have shown that Internet-based treatment is more effective than no-treatment and as effective as face-to-face treatment. Research so far has been limited to anxiety disorders, burn-out,
depression
, headache, insomnia,
tinnitus
and obesity. Further, exposure through virtual reality has been found effective in a number of RCTs in specific phobias, but results with respect to the effects of the use of virtual reality techniques to other disorders are inconclusive. It is concluded that computer-driven assessment and treatment has many advantages and few disadvantages. A number of reasons are discussed which will preclude large-scale implementation of computer-driven assessment and therapy in the near future.
...
PMID:Technological innovations in clinical assessment and psychotherapy. 1624 9
The development and course of chronic
tinnitus
are determined by both biological and psychological factors. To combine these different sources of data, we developed a standardized interview to assess
tinnitus
history, summarize audiological findings, screen for etiological conditions, and explore
tinnitus
-related psychological complaints (Structured
Tinnitus
Interview). The results of a test-retest study with 65
tinnitus
inpatients show that most of these components can be assessed with acceptable or high reliability. Further data based on 166 patients demonstrate that
tinnitus
annoyance was to some extent different from patterns of general psychological complaints, although there were medium intercorrelations with
depression
. Significant predictors of
tinnitus
annoyance were (a) continuous
tinnitus
without intervals, (b) hearing loss, (c) increasing
tinnitus
loudness over time, (d) poor maskability, (e) history of sudden hearing loss, and (f) associated craniomandibular disorder. Psychological distress was not significantly increased in patients whose
tinnitus
was associated to vascular disorder, cervical spine dysfunction, acoustic trauma, Menihre's disease, or neurological disorder.
...
PMID:Assessing audiological, pathophysiological, and psychological variables in chronic tinnitus: a study of reliability and search for prognostic factors. 1625 Jun 73
Progress in neuroscience research has given birth to new theories for
tinnitus
generation. From a point of view where cochlear dysfunctions would be considered as the origin and maintenance mechanisms, it has been introduced the important role of compensation systems from the central auditory pathways. They could act as the most relevant factor for chronic persistent
tinnitus
after a peripheral aggression. Unmasking of silent synapses or sprouting of new ones activate cortical reorganization for frecuencial areas nearby the non-stimulated ones through brain plasticity. Connections to associative cortex and limbic-amigdala area using the non-classical auditory system explain the presence of hyperacusis, anxiety or
depression
, factors that increase the severity of
tinnitus
. Implementation of these physiopathological theories reinforces the
tinnitus
neurophysiological model. The development of an aversive response through the survival reflex and the participation of negative emotional response are the responsible for signal persistence and vegetative reactions from the autonomous nervous system. Implications of this knowledge for
tinnitus
treatment involve the central auditory system approach through the combination of medical counselling for reduction of the aversive reaction and sound therapy to diminish its perception.
...
PMID:[Physiopathological mechanisms in tinnitus generation and persistence]. 1628 31
Hyperacusis is defined as unusual intolerance to ordinary environmental sounds, and is commonly reported in the general population and in association with a range of medical conditions. These include neurological deficits (e.g. migraine), psychiatric conditions (e.g.
depression
), and several ear, nose and throat diagnoses such as
tinnitus
, noise-induced hearing loss, and middle ear malfunctions. However, extreme sensitivity to noise has also been studied from a public health perspective, but with a focus on noise sensitivity in general. In this review a distinction is proposed between three different aspects of the experience of hyperacusis. The first is the sensitivity, with the pain sensations reported in association with sounds. The second is the annoyance, which can be unrelated to loudness, but still cause marked distress. The third aspect deals with the fear of being harmed by sounds, which promotes avoidance and the unmotivated use of ear protection. The natural course of hyperacusis is largely unknown and there are no published randomized outcome studies on the available treatment options for the condition. In this paper we propose that cognitive behavioral therapy, presented in a multidisciplinary setting, could be a useful treatment. This treatment includes relaxation methods, advice regarding sound, and gradual exposure to everyday sounds.
...
PMID:[Hyperacusis--an unexplored field. Cognitive behavior therapy can relieve problems in auditory intolerance, a condition with many questions]. 1632 50
Because psychological aspects often are underscored in the generation of
tinnitus
, we assessed the neuropsychological status in our group of patients. We found an increased number of abnormal electronystagmography (ENG) recordings in
tinnitus
patients. The aim of this study was to compare the ENG outcome with the patients' neuropsychological status. We carried out the study on 69 subjects complaining of
tinnitus
and on 43 healthy persons. We performed clinical neurootological examinations and ENG tests on all patients. Neuropsychological evaluation was conducted by means of the Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI), the Hospital Anxiety and
Depression
(HAD) test, the Mini Mental Status (MMS) test, and the Trail-Making Test (TMT). In 46 patients (66.6%), we found abnormal ENG outcomes (central, 42%; peripheral, 13.0%; mixed, 11.6%). Neuropsychological tests revealed abnormal scores: for the BDI, 43.5% of patients; for the HAD-A, 72.5%; for the HAD-D, 47.8%; for the MMS, 27.5%; and for the TMT, 55.1%. We did not find correlation between the ENG outcomes and neuropsychological test scores. We did not find correlation between the overall ENG outcomes and neuropsychological test scores, with one exception; we found the occurrence of abnormal neuropsychological test scores and the ENG outcome indicating central vestibular dysfunction. Our study showed that despite a high frequency of vestibular system dysfunction signs and a high incidence of abnormal neuropsychological test scores in
tinnitus
patients, only one correlation existed between these two results.
Int
Tinnitus
J 2005
PMID:Electronystagmography outcome and neuropsychological findings in tinnitus patients. 1641 91
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has been used as a potential therapeutic tool in various neurological and psychiatric diseases including
depression
, Parkinson disease, spinocerebellar degeneration, epilepsy, urinary incontinence, movement disorders, chronic pain, migraine and chronic
tinnitus
, etc. Several reports showed the therapeutic effects of rTMS as a treatment of
depression
and Parkinson disease (PD), whereas others found no significant effects. It is by now not yet fully understood whether rTMS has a therapeutic effect on those diseases. The controversy arises from the differences of the stimulation parameters and evaluation methods of the effects in those studies. The Japanese multi-center, double blinded, sham stimulation controlled trial in 85 patients with PD showed an efficacy in both the rTMS-treated and sham stimulated patients. This result does not prove the efficacy of the rTMS in PD; on the other hand, it does not rule out the efficacy. Possible mechanism of favorable effects of rTMS is related to increasing the release of dopamine in the mesolimbic and mesostriatal system. The other Japanese multi-center, double blinded, sham stimulation controlled trial in 99 patients with spinocerebellar degeneration revealed significant therapeutic effects of rTMS in 51 patients with SCA6. We studied the effects of rTMS on seizure susceptibility in rats which prevented the development of status epilepticus of pentylenetetrazol-induced convulsions. This finding suggests the possibility of therapeutic use of rTMS in epilepsy. Further studies should be performed aiming to reveal the optimal stimulation parameters, and are necessary to reveal the therapeutic role of the rTMS in neurological and psychiatric diseases.
...
PMID:[Clinical applications of transcranial magnetic stimulation for the treatment of various neurological diseases]. 1644 38
The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) has been modeled in numerous studies as a possible source of
tinnitus
-generating signals. This hypothesis was originally developed on the basis of evidence that the DCN becomes hyperactive following exposure to intense noise. Since these early observations, evidence that the DCN is an important contributor to
tinnitus
has grown considerably. In this paper, the available evidence to date will be summarized. In addition, the DCN hypothesis of
tinnitus
can now be expanded to include possible involvement in other, non-auditory components of
tinnitus
. It will be shown by way of literature review that the DCN has direct connections with non-auditory brainstem structures, such as the locus coeruleus, reticular formation and raphe nuclei, that are implicated in the control of attention and emotional responses. The hypothesis will be presented that attentional and emotional disorders, such as anxiety and
depression
, which are commonly associated with
tinnitus
, may result from an interplay between these non-auditory brainstem structures and the DCN. Implicit in this hypothesis is that attempts to develop effective anti-
tinnitus
therapies are likely to benefit from a greater understanding of how the levels of activity in the DCN are influenced by different states of activation of these non-auditory brainstem structures and vice versa.
...
PMID:The dorsal cochlear nucleus as a participant in the auditory, attentional and emotional components of tinnitus. 1646 61
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10