Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A group of men with AIDS who chose to follow a macrobiotic regimen as an alternative form of therapy was studied for the possible influence of psychological factors on their clinical progression. In this group, men with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) had an estimated survival time of 60% at 3 years. Moreover, there was a tendency for lymphocyte number to increase during the first 3 years following diagnosis with KS. A subset of eight of these men with KS and one man with Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) agreed to fill out a battery of psychological questionnaires. The results suggest low levels of fatigue, negative affect, and confusion, but high levels of vigor in this subgroup. Additionally, there was significant positive associations of CD4 positive lymphocyte numbers with trait curiosity and hardiness scores and significant negative associations with anxiety and depression. Mitogen responsiveness followed a similar pattern, but only a positive association with curiosity reached significance. Caution has to be used in interpreting such data, especially in view of the size of the sample and the complexity of the cohort. Nonetheless, these findings clearly suggest the need for prospective studies on the influence of psychological factors on the progression of AIDS.
...
PMID:Psychological and immunological associations in men with AIDS pursuing a macrobiotic regimen as an alternative therapy: a pilot study. 279 Feb 32

Subjective symptoms and psychological performances on a computer-administered test battery were studied among a group of 60 chlorine-alkali workers and their matched referents. The exposure time of the group exposed to inorganic mercury vapor had been about 14 years, and the estimated long-term average exposure had been about 25 micrograms/m3 of air. The exposed workers had an actual mercury concentration of 51.9 (SD 25.0, range 15-150) nmol/l in blood and 84.1 (SD 56.6, range 15-260) nmol/l in urine. Neither perceptual motor nor memory nor learning abilities of the mercury-exposed workers showed any disturbances in a comparison with the referents. However, the exposed group reported statistically significantly more memory disturbances than the referents. Strain caused by three-shift work was a possible cofactor for other increased subjective symptoms, namely, for sleep disorders, fatigue, and confusion.
...
PMID:Subjective symptoms and psychological performance of chlorine-alkali workers. 292 91

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured in experienced (ES) and inexperienced (IS) marijuana smokers with the 133xenon inhalation technique before and after smoking both a high-potency marijuana cigarette and a placebo marijuana cigarette. CBF was measured twice under resting conditions in a control group. Mood states before and after marijuana smoking were quantified with the Profile of Mood States (POMS). Analyses of POMS factors after smoking marijuana revealed IS had an increase in anxiety while ES had a decrease. IS also had a significant increase in depression and decrease in vigor, but neither variable changed in the ES. After marijuana, CBF decreased in IS, but in ES, it increased in comparison with the 2 control runs. In both IS and ES, CBF changes following placebo administration were similar to those associated with marijuana smoking. However, in IS, the marijuana-induced CBF decrease was significantly higher than that associated with placebo. There were no statistically significant differences between the CBF increase seen after placebo and marijuana in ES. Anxiety, anger, fatigue, confusion and depression had significant negative correlations with CBF while vigor correlated positively, but the anxiety factor was the only one to account for a significant percentage of the change (parital correlation) in hemispheric CBF.
...
PMID:Acute changes in cerebral blood flow associated with marijuana smoking. 292 5

Mothers of 30 infants who had experienced an emergency apnea episode and were placed on a home apnea monitor were studied longitudinally, using measures of mood disturbance (anxiety, depression, hostility, fatigue, vigor and confusion). Mothers were assessed at the time of hospitalization immediately following the apnea episode, after approximately one month of home monitoring, and after three months of home monitoring. Measures of family resources, health locus of control, and coping style, involving preference for information under situations of threat, were obtained as predictor variables. A high level of mood disturbance was seen initially, but this was transient, diminishing significantly after the first month of monitoring. Level of family resources was highly predictive of mood disturbance throughout the study period, while health locus of control beliefs were predictive of changes in mood disturbance over time. These findings suggest a means for identifying families at higher risk for maladaptive responses, and in need of more intensive psychosocial support.
...
PMID:Psychological impact of home apnea monitoring: temporal effects, family resources, and maternal coping style. 292 69

The purpose of the present study was to determine whether patients with recurrent low back pain display a different pattern of mood fluctuations across days than matched healthy controls and whether these mood states are related to pain occurrence and/or magnitude using a prospective design. The questions addressed are whether mood states prior to a pain episode are associated with the episode or whether mood relates to pain as a secondary reaction. Similarly, the relationship between mood state recorded prior to, during or following pain and magnitude of pain experienced was investigated. Thirty-three ambulatory chronic low back pain patients and an equivalent group of asymptomatic controls matched for age, sex, socioeconomic status, and reported activity level monitored mood state (anxiety, tension, depression, anger, vigor, fatigue, confusion) and pain before breakfast, at 4 p.m. and at bedtime for 14 consecutive days. Groups were successfully matched. Analyses revealed significantly higher levels of tension, anxiety and fatigue and lower levels of vigor in the pain cases. No mood state was predictive of pain onset but fatigue was associated with pain 24 h following pain, indicating fatigue as secondary to pain. While mood state recorded prior to or following pain was unable to predict magnitude of pain, fatigue was associated with the level of pain experienced during the pain episode itself. The findings reveal a pattern of anxiety, tension and fatigue where fatigue is associated with increased pain during the pain episode and is increased 24 h following pain. This fatigue-pain relationship is superimposed upon a continuous elevation of anxiety and tension. These findings suggest the importance of pain management efforts directed at decreasing patients' fatigue levels, and increasing functional endurance while simultaneously reducing anxiety. The results also question the role of negative mood states in the initiation or exacerbation of pain and highlights the influence of physical mood states such as fatigue on pain in low back pain.
...
PMID:A prospective analysis of stress and fatigue in recurrent low back pain. 296 55

A young woman presented with a short history of fatigue and confusion. Investigation showed that she was hypoglycaemic with a metabolic acidosis due to acute monocytic leukaemia. She died before specific treatment could be given for her leukaemia, but illustrates some of the problems in treating the metabolic complications of neoplastic disease.
...
PMID:Hypoglycaemia and metabolic acidosis in a patient with an acute leukaemia. 318 1

Residency training may disrupt normal sleep/wake cycles, resulting in mood and performance deficits and alterations in biological rhythms. To characterize such disturbances and determine whether they are associated with an alteration in the day/night pattern of melatonin excretion, measurements were obtained around-the-clock in seven male subjects, each studied in two 48-h sessions. Session 1 was conducted during the week before beginning a residency, and session 2 at 6 months into a first-year surgical residency. The mean time of the end of nocturnal sleep and the timing of the temperature rhythm were both (P less than .01) approximately 2.3 h earlier in session 2 (vs. 1). The sleepiness rhythm and the overall mood score rhythm were also phase-advanced (P less than .05) in session 2. The mean value of mood around-the-clock was significantly worse due to increased anger, tension, confusion, depression, and fatigue in session 2. Vigilance, tested by simple reaction time, did not exhibit a 25-h rhythm and was worse in session 2 with an increase (P less than .05) in mean response latency less than 1 s and an increase (P less than .01) in lapse time (microsleep, greater than 1- s latency). The urinary cortisol rhythm exhibited a raised curve average value (mesor) in session 2 (vs. 1, P less than .05), but no difference was revealed in amplitude or acrophase. Urinary excretion of Na+, K+, and Cl- did not differ between sessions, though the Na+/K+ ratio peaked earlier in session 2 (P less than .05). The urinary 6-sulfatoxymelatonin rhythm did not differ in timing, amplitude, or mesor between sessions. A residency training schedule can be associated with altered timing in rhythms of sleep, sleepiness, temperature, and mood and with deterioration of mood and performance without detectable alteration of the endogenous melatonin pattern as exhibited by the excretion rate of the principal urinary metabolite.
...
PMID:Alterations of temperature, sleepiness, mood, and performance in residents are not associated with changes in sulfatoxymelatonin excretion. 322 34

Because of the prevalence of supine posture and sleep deprivation in both health and disease, we wondered how each of them influences prolonged maximal voluntary ventilation (MVV). Accordingly, we compared 12-second, 1-min, and 10-min isocapnic MVV supine with that measured in the upright posture in 8 healthy subjects. MVV decreased 6-10% supine, independent of test duration (p less than 0.01). Although end-expiratory lung volume was 0.47 liter lower during supine resting breathing (p less than 0.001), end-expiratory lung volumes during short-term MVV maneuvers were identical. To investigate any additional effect on MVV due to sleep loss, 12 healthy subjects performed 12-second, 1-min, and 30-min isocapnic MVV maneuvers in the supine position, either after normal sleep or after a 24-hour sleepless period. Sleep deprivation reduced MVV by 7-14%, again independent of test duration (p less than 0.05). Sleep loss also reduced the ventilation chosen to represent a submaximal (75%) breathing effect (p = 0.05), and it increased subjective ratings of fatigue and confusion (p less than 0.01). We conclude that supination and sleep deprivation together decrease both short- and long-term MVV by nearly 20%, with impairment of supination not caused by lung volume changes, and with the sleep loss effect occurring in tandem with a rise in the subjective assessment of breathing effort.
...
PMID:Supine position and sleep loss each reduce prolonged maximal voluntary ventilation. 323 96

The combination of nifedipine and atenolol must be evaluated in terms of risks and benefits to the hypertensive patient. Disadvantages with single-agent therapy justify trials of combination regimens. beta-Blockers may be unacceptable to some patients because of gastrointestinal upset, musculoskeletal symptoms, tiredness, malaise, insomnia, depression or confusion, sweating, breathlessness or cold extremities. The side effect profile varies from patient to patient and between different beta-blockers. Calcium antagonists also have characteristic side effects, including severe headaches, flushing and oedema, tachycardia and possibly worrying palpitations, and polyuria. Combining a calcium antagonist and a beta-blocker can reduce some side effects; for example, tachycardia is offset by addition of beta-blocker to calcium antagonist therapy, and beta-blocker-induced cold extremities may be reversed with a drug such as nifedipine. Moreover, the antihypertensive efficacy is increased, which is useful in previously resistant patients. However, an excessive fall in blood pressure is a possible adverse effect of the combination. There is also the possibility of precipitating heart failure in patients with cardiomegaly and severely compromised left ventricular function. The combination of nifedipine and atenolol was evaluated in 25 patients in a randomised, crossover trial following a month's treatment with atenolol 50mg twice daily. Patients received either atenolol 50mg twice daily alone, or atenolol 50mg twice daily with sustained release nifedipine 20mg or 40mg twice daily, or placebo twice daily during three 4-week treatment periods. Additional antihypertensive benefit was obtained by addition of the low dose of nifedipine compared with atenolol alone, but no further advantage was obtained with the higher nifedipine dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Aims of combination therapy--improved quality of life or better blood pressure control? 337 14

One hundred and seven patients with advanced pancreatic cancer and 111 patients with advanced gastric cancer, stratified for key medical and sociodemographic variables, were assessed with the Profile of Mood States before beginning combination chemotherapy in a national cancer clinical trials group. The pancreatic cancer patients had significantly higher self-ratings of depression, tension-anxiety, fatigue, confusion-bewilderment, and total mood disturbance; no difference was found in vigor or anger-hostility. These data support prior observations that patients with advanced pancreatic cancer experience significantly greater general psychological disturbance than patients with another type of advanced abdominal neoplasm.
...
PMID:Comparative psychological disturbance in patients with pancreatic and gastric cancer. 352 79


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>