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The purposes of this study were to determine and evaluate the psychosexual behavior of selected patients whose jaws were immobilized. Data for this pilot study were collected by using a standardized interview protocol with ten patients whose jaws were immobilized. The interview questions were designed to ascertain whether sexual problems existed, the nature and management of these problems, and the suggested role the operating surgeon might assume in assisting the patient. The data revealed that sexual difficulties were experienced by nine of these patients, and many of their problems were similar. The chief complaints included: (1) shortness of breath during sexual intercourse, (2) difficulty in oral foreplay, (3) poor verbal communication, (4) altered self-image, (5) sexual dysfunctions induced by pain medication, (6) depression, and (7) a lack of ability to exercise oral-genital sexual contact. Nine of the ten patients agreed that the operating surgeon should inform his or her patients with immobilized jaws of potential sexual disability. We believe that additional studies of these problems could enhance the management of patients with oral and maxillofacial injuries.
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PMID:Psychosexual dysfunction in patients with immobilized jaws. 28 Aug 45

The present study investigated the relationship between respiratory function, catastrophic thoughts about anxiety, and panic in 48 Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients. During a routine office visit which included respiratory function tests (Forced Vital Capacity, FVC; Forced Expiratory Volume--first second, FEV1) patients completed a battery of questionnaires which assessed history of panic, days with shortness of breath, general activity level, agoraphobic cognitions, perception of bodily sensations, anxiety and depression. Thirty-seven percent of the sample reported experiencing a panic attack. Subjects showed a significant impairment in respiratory functioning. Patients with a history of panic did not differ from those who had not experienced panic on demographic, physiologic, or activity variables. Patients who experienced panic reported significantly more agoraphobic cognitions and greater concern with bodily sensations than did patients who did not experience panic.
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PMID:Respiratory function, cognitions, and panic in chronic obstructive pulmonary patients. 154 Jan 18

A total of 383 cases of incident panic attack were identified among 12,823 participants in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Program over various 12-month periods in 1980-1983. These cases not phobia-stimulated were compared with 766 controls. Risk factors were examined for the onset of panic attacks, with attacks categorized as panic disorder, severe and unexplained panic attacks, or other panic attacks. Risk factors were also examined for the onset of attacks in which cardiovascular symptoms were experienced and those in which psychologic symptoms were experienced. Females were at greater risk than males for each category of attacks (relative odds ranged from 1.36 to 2.25). Persons aged 65 years or older were at lower risk than younger persons (relative odds, compared with 30- to 44-year-olds, ranged from 0.26 to 0.71). A history of cardiac symptoms, shortness of breath, depression or a major grief episode, drug abuse or dependence, alcohol abuse or dependence, and seizures were each strongly associated with panic attacks. A history of cardiac symptoms was more strongly associated with attacks in which cardiovascular symptoms were experienced than with attacks in which psychologic symptoms were experienced (relative odds, 8.36 vs. 2.23). A history of seizures was more strongly associated with attacks with psychologic symptoms than with attacks with cardiovascular symptoms (relative odds, 5.21 vs. 1.58).
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PMID:Risk factors for the onset of panic disorder and other panic attacks in a prospective, population-based study. 229 82

Despite having fixed changes in lung structure, patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and interstitial pulmonary fibrosis can be helped by pulmonary rehabilitation. They learn that shortness of breath is not to be feared but rather accepted and tolerated as a step toward eventual successful rehabilitation. They are taught to accept the reality of their disease but not to dwell on its limitations. They learn to fight depression and anxiety and to overcome their disability within a realistic framework. From the exercise program they build strength, endurance, and confidence and become more independent and mobile. Even very compromised patients can benefit from an intensive inpatient rehabilitation program.
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PMID:Inpatient pulmonary rehabilitation. A team approach to the more fragile patient. 281 9

Global left ventricular function and a modified V5 electrocardiographic (ECG) lead were continuously monitored by a radionuclide recorder in 12 normal subjects and 39 patients with coronary artery disease while the subjects were performing various daily activities. The ambulatory studies revealed that walking on a level surface caused 11 of 12 normal subjects and 18 of 32 patients to increase their left ventricular ejection fraction by greater than 6% units. A transient decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction (6 to 18%) lasting greater than or equal to 1 min was observed on 36 occasions in 16 patients with coronary artery disease; 12 episodes were accompanied by chest pain or shortness of breath and 24 were asymptomatic. Electrocardiographic ST segment depression suggestive of ischemia was recorded in 6 of the 12 symptomatic and 5 of the 24 asymptomatic episodes. In 10 of the 12 symptomatic episodes, left ventricular ejection fraction began to decrease 30 to 90 s before the onset of symptoms. These studies suggest that continuous monitoring of both left ventricular function and the ECG may permit stratification of episodes of ST depression suggesting ischemia by the degree of left ventricular dysfunction they produce.
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PMID:Continuous monitoring of left ventricular function by an ambulatory radionuclide detector in patients with coronary artery disease. 340 23

Nuclear ventriculography (MUGA) was performed in 22 patients at rest and during the stress of right atrial pacing 6 to 8 days after coronary artery bypass surgery. In 7 patients the MUGA-atrial pacing test was positive for ischemia with chest pain, electrocardiographic ST depression and/or a decrease in global left ventricular ejection fraction of greater than 10%. All 7 patients subsequently developed angina pectoris with a positive treadmill test (performed at a median time of 14 months after operation). In 15 patients, the early postoperative MUGA-atrial pacing test was negative. In this group, 3 patients subsequently developed angina pectoris with a positive treadmill test in one. The sensitivity of the 'one week' early postoperative MUGA-atrial pacing in the identification of patients with residual myocardial ischemia was high (88% for positive GXT, p less than 0.0001; 70% for chest pain, p less than 0.005) with 100% specificity. The early postoperative MUGA scan was also useful in predicting later shortness of breath on exertion and there was a significant correlation between the early resting ejection fraction and the exercise capacity of the patient subsequently. The information obtained from an early postoperative MUGA-atrial pacing study may have far-reaching and important practical application in selecting patients for early recatheterization, possible fibrinolysis and/or possible cardiac reoperation.
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PMID:Early postoperative assessment of coronary artery bypass surgery using nuclear left ventriculography and atrial pacing. 619 61

Medical students and board-certified general internists were presented with two written clinical simulations and asked to list their initial diagnostic hypotheses. Bronchial asthma and respiratory infection were among the three most frequently listed causes of a sudden shortness of breath in a young male, while malignancy, depression, and thyrotoxicosis were among the six most frequently listed causes of fatigue and loss of weight in a young woman. Junior medical students in the preclinical phase of the curriculum responded with fewer and less specific initial diagnostic hypotheses than did the internists. The number and specificity of the hypotheses advanced by senior medical students, who had completed the medical clerkship, were similar to those of the internists. However, the senior students advanced a wider range of diagnostic possibilities, some of which are rare or virtually nonexistent in the age groups of the patients in the simulations. These findings identify two deficiencies in students' diagnostic problem-solving: (a) lack of familiarity with alternative diagnostic possibilities and (b) poor ability to consider diagnostic hypotheses in terms of probabilities.
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PMID:A comparison of initial diagnostic hypotheses of medical students and internists. 650 64

Panic disorder is a chronic illness that affects at least 3 percent of the population. Panic disorder is associated with significant morbidity and an increased risk of suicide. Patients generally present with multiple somatic and psychologic complaints, including heart palpitations, chest pain, tremor, shortness of breath, choking, nausea or abdominal distress, dizziness, derealization, fear of losing control or going crazy, fear of dying, paresthesias, chills or hot flushes, headache, diarrhea, insomnia, chronic fatigue, anxiety and depression. To make the correct diagnosis, these symptoms must be evaluated carefully since they also occur with serious cardiovascular, pulmonary, endocrinologic and neurologic disorders. Many effective treatments are available, including tricyclic antidepressants, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, monoamine oxidase inhibitors, benzodiazepines such as alprazolam and clonazepam, and psychotherapy.
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PMID:Panic disorder. 748 99

We conducted a randomized clinical trial to evaluate a limited pulmonary rehabilitation program focused on coping strategies for shortness of breath but without exercise training. Eighty-nine patients with COPD were randomly assigned to either 6-week treatment or general health education control groups. Treatment consisted of instruction and practice in techniques of progressive muscle relaxation, breathing retraining, pacing, self-talk, and panic control. Tests of 6-min walk distance, quality of well-being, and psychological function as well as six dyspnea measures were administered at baseline, posttreatment, and 6 months after the intervention. Baseline pulmonary function tests also were obtained. At the end of the 6-week treatment, there were no significant differences between the treatment and control groups on any outcome measure. At the 6-month follow-up, a significant group difference was seen on only one variable, Mahler's transition dyspnea index. The results of this evaluation suggest that a treatment program of dyspnea management strategies, without structured exercise training or other components of a comprehensive pulmonary rehabilitation program, is not sufficient to produce significant improvement in dyspnea, exercise tolerance, health-related quality of well-being, anxiety, or depression.
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PMID:Treatment of dyspnea in COPD. A controlled clinical trial of dyspnea management strategies. 749 13

The validity of the biopsychosocial approach to the study of health and illness is reaffirmed by the prospective findings of the Recovery Study. This is a multidisciplinary examination, conducted in four teaching hospitals, of the predictors of symptoms of cardiac illness in 463 patients 6 months after coronary artery bypass or cardiac valve surgery. We found that the following preoperative measures predict freedom from cardiac symptoms 6 months after surgery: low levels of all of the following: angina pain, shortness of breath, fatigue and sleep problems, lifetime cigarette usage, and preoperative hospitalization for cardiac treatment; low levels of anxiety, depression, and hostility, and few life change events; high levels of all of the following: self-esteem, well-being, vigor; prevalence of activities and hobbies, social participation, and social support. The six variables in bold print contributed independently in a multiple regression equation that accounted for 21% of the variance of the symptoms score and was associated with an estimated 45% difference in success of recovery. The statistical strength and general nature of many of the predictors indicate that the predictors may also be important in recovery from other health crises. Psychosocial and biomedical factors correlate across time (predictively), as well as cross-sectionally, indicating that psychological, social, and biological mechanisms may be parts of a single general multifaceted process influencing recovery of health. A clinical trial could determine if psychological, social, or behavioral interventions will hasten and improve recovery from physical illness or trauma.
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PMID:Quantifying and predicting recovery after heart surgery. 808 66


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