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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An investigation of a case of apparent mass psychogenic illness was undertaken in a midwestern electronics assembly plant. The plant employed 500 workers, of whom 80% were female. The illness outbreak involved a total of 90 female first shift workers who reported a variety of nonspecific symptoms such as headache,
dizziness
, and lightheadedness in response to a strange odor in the workplace. Although environmental testing revealed some localized concentrations of a few airbone contaminants, no environmental toxins were discovered that could account for the continuing outbreaks of illness. An ad hoc sample of affected and nonaffected workers was surveyed to assess the influence of psychological, sociological, and work environment factors in the outbreak. Analysis of the data revealed that affected workers reported more physical discomfort (temperature variations, poor lighting) in the workplace as well as psychological job stress (increase in workload, conflicts with supervisors) than did nonaffected workers. Moreover, affected workers scored significantly higher than nonaffected workers on personality tests measuring extraversion and
hysteria
traits.
...
PMID:An investigation of apparent mass psychogenic illness in an electronics plant. 53 40
On Sept 21, 1973, during and following a football game at which they had participated, 57 members of an Alabama high school marching band (and one accompanying adult) experienced an illness characterized by headache, nausea, weakness, or
dizziness
. Six girls fainted. Thirty-six students were treated at a hospital emergency room. Those who had played wind instruments and had worn heavier uniforms including an impermeable plastic jacket overlay were affected earlier and more frequently than the others. Several organic causes were examined in an epidemiologic investigation and considered unlikely to explain the epidemic. Female preponderance, a bimodal epidemic curve, hyperventilation, relapses, and clinical features characterized by subjective complaints in the absence of physical findings suggested a syncopal reaction to heat exacerbated and propagated by mass
hysteria
.
...
PMID:Epidemic faintness and syncope in a school marching band. 57 63
Seventy patients presenting symptoms of
hysteria
(49 women and 21 men) were selected among patients observed at the Institute Minkowska during the year. This work is part of a research work on socio-cultural and environmental factors which can change mental status of immigrants. These are all portugese workers presenting for the first time atypical mental troubles called by the author: "bastard hysterical syndrome of the immigrant" and characterized partly or totally by the following symptoms: fatigue, anxiety, sense of suffocation, dyspnea, coughing, unilateral chills or generalized chil, abdominal or gastric pains, headaches and "diffused pains", paresthesia, aching back, tears and sorrow, fear of dying or having a cancer, asthenia, leg paresthesia and contractions, vomiting, diarrhea, cardiac pains, palpitations,
dizziness
and collapsing. These troubles appear sometimes without apparent motives but they are almost always due to a precipitating cause expressed by the patient: a delivery, a familial death, a homosexual proposition, a trauma without importance, a working conflict etc... But the most frequent cause invoked is "the french climate" without knowing precisely what the word "climate" means: atmospheric conditions, athmosphere or reception milieu? This latest interpretation seems more likely after months of psychotherapy. Most patients are not french speaking and cannot write; their origin is rural (familial villages well structured regarding their food and sexual economy), and people well "armed" by a system of defense mechanisms and well adopted conditioned reflexes. In this work,
hysteria
of the portugese immigrant is compared to childhood
hysteria
. As the hysterical burst of the child is aimed at calling attention, love of the mother, at finding a solution to a familial or social conflict, the hysterical burst of the immigrant is aimed at the absent family or at its substitutes, the bos, social security, the doctor. Furthermore, the attitude of the hosting Country--wanting and rejecting--is very ambivalent; "tenderness" at the time of reception, followed by indifference. Early attentions are followed by constant interdictions (threat of unemployment, false statements on sexual dangers of the immigrant etc;..). The immigrant, like the hysterical child, is periodically controlled (work and visit cards), supervised (supervisors), The narcistic satisfactions of being called a good worker can be followed by threats of firing in economic crisis. The society of the hosting country requires the immigrant to be identical to this society: language, physical appearance, food. The real paradoxical situation to which the immigrant is confronted and the real or hypothetical fears constitute conditions of experimental neurosis, to which portugese immigrants react very often by a bastard symptomatology of hysterical type, characteristic of displaced man. These preliminary studies are the frame for a future epidemiological survey in this specific population.
...
PMID:[Hysteria and psychosomatic disorders in Portuguese immigrants]. 102 Jun 87
The Crown-Crisp Experiential Index (CCEI) was administered to 472 patients complaining of tinnitus who took part in a multi-centre study on tinnitus masking (Hazell et al., 1985). This inventory includes scales of anxiety, phobic anxiety, obsessionality, somatic anxiety, depression and
hysteria
. The scores on the CCEI scales for patients with and without '
dizziness
' as an additional symptom were compared. In the non-dizzy patients, scores on the anxiety and depression scales were consistently elevated compared with the published normative values. In the dizzy patients scores on all scales except
Hysteria
were elevated. The most pronounced and consistent difference between the dizzy and non-dizzy patients was in the Somatic Anxiety scale. The presence of
dizziness
also obscured the relationship between the CCEI scales and measures of tinnitus. In contrast, however, hearing disability did not appear to influence the results.
...
PMID:The Crown-Crisp Experiential Index in patients complaining of tinnitus. 402 40
Psychogenic epidemics cover various forms of collective behavior and include mass
hysteria
, mass psychogenic illness, and hysterical contagion for which no physical explanation can be found. The typical course of a psychogenic epidemic at a workplace progresses from sudden onset, often with dramatic symptoms, to a rapidly attained peak that draws much publicity and is followed by quick disappearance of the symptoms. Over 90% of the affected persons are women, and the symptoms range from
dizziness
, vomiting, nausea, and fainting to epileptic-type seizures, hyperventilation, and skin disorders. The background mechanisms are thought to be generalized beliefs and triggering events which create a sense of threat that leads to a physiological state of arousal. This state, in turn, creates new beliefs which give meaning to the sense of arousal. The new belief spreads through sociometric channels. Predisposing factors include boredom, pressure to produce, physical stressors, poor labor-management relations, and impaired interpersonal communications, and lack of social support. It is important that a thorough investigation be carried out in all instances. Investigation is not only necessary for diagnosis, but it also reassures the management, the employees, and the press that physical factors are unlikely to be responsible for the disease.
...
PMID:Psychogenic epidemics and work. 653 52
On May 21, 1979, an outbreak of illness spread swiftly among elementary school students in a Boston suburb. Of 224 boys and girls attending an assembly, 34 were hospitalized with severe
dizziness
, weakness, hyperventilation, headache, nausea, and abdominal pain. Sudden remission of symptoms, preponderance in girls, and failure of an extensive epidemiological investigation to detect an organic cause indicated mass
hysteria
. To test the hypothesis that previous loss influenced a child's vulnerability to current loss and predisposed that child to mass
hysteria
, we compared the incidence of family disruption in the hospitalized children with that in the nonhospitalized children. A significantly higher rate of parental divorce (P less than .00005) and death within the family (P less than .0005) occurred among the hospitalized children. These findings suggest a relationship between childhood loss and susceptibility to mass
hysteria
.
...
PMID:Mass hysteria among schoolchildren. Early loss as a predisposing factor. 709 5
Most cases of
dizziness
or syncope referred to the emergency department or to services of internal medicine are caused by vasovagal syndromes. They comprise relative bradycardia with vasoplegia, the cardiovascular response to a neurological stimulus. It is possible to distinguish vagal or vasovagal syncope which is very common, the very stereotype reflex syncopes, carotid sinus hypersensitivity sometimes associated with sinus node dysfunction and borderline forms such as orthostatic sinus tachycardia and cerebrovascular syncope. The differential diagnosis is vast, from simple
hysteria
to severe cardiac disease. Tilt testing should be indicated for diagnosis of most cases of syncope with apparently normal hearts. Therapeutic abstention is the rule, providing certain preventive measures are taken, but, should treatment be necessary, cardiac pacing remains an exceptional modality in vasovagal syncope. Strict clinical and physiopathological studies are still required to determine the long-term prognosis and the underlying mechanisms of these syndromes.
...
PMID:[Vasovagal syndromes]. 974 83
The general public, the mass media, and many government officials believe that the use of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) will inevitably lead to mass panic and/or mass
hysteria
. However, studies of disasters and wars show that disorganized flight in the presence of a real or perceived danger (i.e., mass panic) is rare. On the other hand, in a real or perceived WMD scenario, outbreaks of multiple unexplained symptoms (i.e., mass psychogenic illness, mass sociogenic illness, mass
hysteria
, or epidemic
hysteria
) may be prevalent. Many of the symptoms (fatigue, nausea, vomiting, headache,
dizziness
/lightheadedness, and anorexia) are common in combat and after toxic chemical exposure, chemical weapon exposure, prodromal infectious illness, and acute radiation sickness.
...
PMID:Collective behaviors: mass panic and outbreaks of multiple unexplained symptoms. 1177 31
Mass psychogenic illness (epidemic sociogenic attacks/mass
hysteria
) refers to a rapid spread of well-described signs and symptoms affecting members of a group. It might be difficult to differentiate at first from illnesses due to infections, intoxications or "bio-terrorism." We investigated such an occurrence in a small village in Lebanon chronically under threat of war. A 16-year-old single female, school student, was referred to Saint George Hospital University Medical Center, Beirut, for attacks of shortness of breath, muscle cramps, tremors and
dizziness
, for several days. She was referred because she was the first of eight cases from the same village to have similar symptoms. In parallel to an inpatient multidisciplinary evaluation and treatment, meetings were held with the crisis group comprising members of the hospital Psychiatry and Psychology Department, a public health representative of the Ministry of Health of Lebanon, physicians who were taking care of the other cases and a psychologist working in the area where these cases were declared. The diagnosis of mass psychogenic illness (epidemic sociogenic attacks) was reached. A common strategy was adopted in an effort to control the epidemic. Several explanations had been put forward initially by the community : bioterrorism, noxious fumes and "bad spirits." At the time of writing this report--nine months later--, the epidemic, which had abated within six weeks, was still inactive.
...
PMID:Mass psychogenic illness (epidemic sociogenic attacks) in a village in Lebanon. 1768 27
During the First World War the National Hospital for the Paralysed and Epileptic, in Queen Square, London, then Britain's leading centre for neurology, took a key role in the treatment and understanding of shell shock. This paper explores the case notes of all 462 servicemen who were admitted with functional neurological disorders between 1914 and 1919. Many of these were severe or chronic cases referred to the National Hospital because of its acknowledged expertise and the resources it could call upon. Biographical data was collected together with accounts of the patient's military experience, his symptoms, diagnostic interpretations and treatment outcomes. Analysis of the notes showed that motor syndromes (loss of function or hyperkinesias), often combined with somato-sensory loss, were common presentations. Anxiety and depression as well as vegetative symptoms such as sweating,
dizziness
and palpitations were also prevalent among this patient population. Conversely, psychogenic seizures were reported much less frequently than in comparable accounts from German tertiary referral centres. As the war unfolded the number of physicians who believed that shell shock was primarily an organic disorder fell as research failed to find a pathological basis for its symptoms. However, little agreement existed among the Queen Square doctors about the fundamental nature of the disorder and it was increasingly categorised as functional disorder or
hysteria
.
...
PMID:'Shell shock' revisited: an examination of the case records of the National Hospital in London. 2528 93
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