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)

The study assessed the quality of life of 53 women who had a lumpectomy or other breast-conserving surgery for breast cancer followed by radiation therapy. The women were interviewed a mean of 7 weeks after the course of radiation therapy regarding their functioning, emotional distress, and symptoms. Functioning was measured by the Sickness Impact Profile, emotional distress by the Profile of Mood States, and symptoms by the Symptom Distress Scale. Although the women were not experiencing many changes in their usual activities, were not distressed emotionally, and were experiencing very few symptoms, they were experiencing fatigue. Those who experienced the most fatigue had the most symptoms and the poorest level of functioning.
...
PMID:Women with breast cancer: their quality of life following a course of radiation therapy. 802 81

Acceptance of health status as an outcome in clinical trials of new treatments for HIV disease has been hampered by the lack of valid and clinically relevant means of summarizing differences across multiple dimensions. We formed a summary Perceived Health Index from health status measures adapted from RAND Medical Outcomes Study scale and contained in the HIV-PARSE survey instrument, which had been administered to a large number of participants in clinical trials for advanced HIV disease. The psychometric properties of the included health status scales were assessed using multitrait scaling and test-retest stability. Weights for the index were derived from regressions of Current Health Perceptions on the domain-specific health status scales. The effect of participant characteristics on weights was tested. Finally, the reliability and known-clinical groups validity of the index was assessed. Data were obtained from 1,862 clinical trial participants who provided a total of 7,352 observations. The mean CD4 count was 131. The internal consistency reliability of the multi-item scales ranged from 0.86 to 0.90, and items demonstrated excellent discrimination across scales. The domain-specific scales explained 59% of the variation in the Current Health Perceptions scale (P < 0.00001). The resulting Perceived Health Index was equal to 0.20 Physical Functioning + 0.15 Pain + 0.41 Energy/Fatigue + 0.10 Emotional Well-being + 0.05 Social Functioning + 0.09 Role Functioning. The strong positive bivariate relationship between the Cognitive Function/Distress scale and the Current Health Perceptions scale was subsumed by the combination of the other domain-specific scales in multiple regressions, so it does not appear independently in the index. The proportional weights used in the index were insensitive to variations in demographics. The reliability of the index was conservatively estimated to be 0.94. Patients with index scores in the lowest quartile had a 2- to 11-fold higher probability than those in the highest quartile of reporting various specific clinical events, and the index correlated significantly more highly with the number of such events than did the current health perceptions scale. The modified MOS health status scales included in the HIV-PARSE are reliable and valid in patients with advanced HIV disease. The Perceived Health Index provides a reliable and valid means of summarizing self-reported current health, correlates strongly with clinical indicators, and should be useful as a outcome measure in patients enrolling into clinical trials of therapies for advanced HIV disease. Regression based weights are a useful means of summarizing multidimensional measures.
...
PMID:A Perceived Health Index for use in persons with advanced HIV disease: derivation, reliability, and validity. 802 6

Lung cancer is the number one cause of cancer-related death for women in the United States, yet studies describing the experience of women living with lung cancer are nonexistent. A sample of 69 women with lung cancer described their symptom distress using the Symptom Distress Scale (SDS). The majority of the women (86%) had been diagnosed with primary or recurrent lung cancer within the 2 years previous, 78% had non-small-cell lung cancer, and 43% were currently receiving treatment. The most prevalent and most distressing symptoms included fatigue, frequent pain, and insomnia. Poor outlook, dyspnea, and appetite disruptions were other common distressing problems. Sixty-one percent of the subjects had two or more serious symptoms. Forty-one percent of those subjects with fatigue concurrently experienced frequent pain, and 31% had insomnia. Those with recurrent disease had significantly greater levels of distress (P = 0.03). Concurrent respiratory disease, previous chemotherapy, recurrent lung cancer, no surgical treatment, and low income were associated with a high level of symptom distress (P < 0.05). Treatment was not a significant factor relating to distress. Distress was strongly correlated to quality of life (r = 0.72, P < 0.001) and functional status (r = 0.71, P < 0.001). Poverty-level income was a weak predictor of distress among demographic and disease/treatment variables, accounting for 17% of the variance. Combined with recurrence, the model accounted for 26% of the variance.
...
PMID:Correlates of symptom distress in women with lung cancer. 832 26

The purpose of this study was to describe disruptions in quality of life (QOL) in women suffering from lung cancer, the leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States. QOL was measured with the CARES-SF. Symptom distress was measured with the modified Symptom Distress Scale, and functional status was measured with the Karnofsky Performance Status Scale. Sixty-nine women with lung cancer participated in a one-time data collection. The typical subject was under 65 years of age, married, has had primary or recurrent non-small cell lung cancer for over 12 months, had limited disease, and was not currently receiving treatment. Subjects had greater disruptions in global QOL and its dimensions compared to a normative heterogeneous female cancer sample. The most prevalent serious disruptions were fatigue, difficulty with household chores, worry about ability to care for self, and worry about cancer progression. The global CARES-SF score was moderately correlated to functional status (r = 0.69, p = < 0.001), and to symptom distress (r = 0.72, p = < 0.001). Symptom distress was associated strongly with the physical subscale of QOL (r = 0.80, p = 0.001) and significantly but less strongly with all other dimensions of QOL. Significantly greater differences in disruptions of quality of life occurred in women younger than 65 years (p = 0.04), women with recurrent disease (p = 0.003), and women with low income (p = 0.008). In stepwise regression, symptom distress predicted 53% of the variance followed by functional status (59%) and recurrence (63%) when QOL was the outcome variable.
...
PMID:Women with lung cancer: impact on quality of life. 838 54

Evidence indicates that emotional distress has a long-term impact on morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD), and that symptoms of depression, fatigue, and reduced energy may identify high-risk patients. This study was designed to: (1) devise a sound and practical measure of emotional distress in CHD patients; (2) examine the relationship between emotional distress and fatigue following CHD; and (3) examine changes in emotional distress as a function of cardiac rehabilitation. A sample of 478 men with CHD (mean age = 57.8 +/- 8.7 y) filled out questionnaires 3-6 weeks following a myocardial infarction (N = 110), bypass surgery (N = 302), or coronary angioplasty (N = 66). Statistical analyses of 56 Dutch mood terms were used to produce the 20-item Global Mood Scale (GMS) which measures negative affect (characterized by fatigue and malaise), as well as positive affect (characterized by energy and sociability), in patients with CHD. The GMS was found to be a reliable scale (alpha > 0.90; r > 0.55 over a 3-month period), and correlations with existing measures of emotional functioning and self-deception indicated its convergent and discriminant validity. Most importantly, fatigue was not related to cardiorespiratory fitness in a subset of 140 patients, but clearly was associated with negative affect. Consistent with the self-efficacy model, scores on the GMS mood scales improved significantly as a function of rehabilitation (P < 0.0001). Although symptoms of emotional distress are easily explained away by situational factors, previous research suggests that failure to recognize the clinical significance of these symptoms in CHD patients may result in the delay of much needed intervention. The current findings suggest that the GMS is a theoretically and psychometrically sound measure of emotional distress in CHD patients, and that this scale is sufficiently sensitive to assess change.
...
PMID:Emotional distress and fatigue in coronary heart disease: the Global Mood Scale (GMS). 847 98

The primary purpose of this study was to determine if a psychoeducational nursing intervention including (a) health education, (b) stress management, and (c) the teaching of coping skills could enhance the coping behavior and affective state of newly diagnosed Stage I/II malignant melanoma patients. The secondary purpose was to determine if this intervention could be implemented by a nurse and integrated into the overall patient care program. Sixty-one patients were randomized to a control condition or an experimental condition that received and educational manual plus 3 h of individual nurse teaching. Despite randomization, experimental patients had significantly higher baseline distress. By 3 months there was a complete reversal of the baseline trend in Profile of Mood States (POMS) total mood disturbance (TMD), suggesting that the experimental subjects were experiencing less distress over time. Between-group analysis of change scores found significant decreases in experimental subjects for POMS TMD, fatigue, and Brief Symptom Index (BSI) somatization. Within-group analysis found significant experimental decreases for BSI somatization, anxiety, grand total, General Severity Index, and Positive Symptom Distress Index as well as for POMS anxiety, fatigue, confusion, vigor, and TMD. No significant changes were found for controls. Experimental patients were using significantly fewer ineffective passive resignation coping strategies than controls at 3 months.
...
PMID:A psychoeducational nursing intervention to enhance coping and affective state in newly diagnosed malignant melanoma patients. 856 38

Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) has been studied in many countries, but few studies have been reported internationally on the experience of Chinese women. Because culture and employment are important factors in the perception of health status, in this study we sought to determine the existence and features of PMS in Chinese clerical women in Hong Kong. We used a cross-sectional, retrospective approach to collect data with a translation of an established questionnaire (the Menstrual Distress Questionnaire). Fatigue was found to be the most prevalent symptom, and the Pain, Water Retention, Behavioral Change, and Negative Affect scales had more than 64% frequency. The main difference between these findings and those of other studies is that negative affect featured most prominently in Western samples, whereas pain featured most highly in this sample of Chinese women.
...
PMID:Premenstrual syndrome in employed Chinese women in Hong Kong. 870 89

Emotional instability which might be an early symptom of more severe disorders, is one of the first manifestations of chronic exposure to organic solvents. The present study measures the association between exposure to styrene and mood states of active workers. A total of 128 workers (85% of the total population) from 3 factories where styrene is used, participated on a voluntary basis. They filled out the following self-administered questionnaires: Profile of Mood States (POMS), Psychiatric Symptom Index and Well-being Index. The results indicate a significant relationship between post work-shift urinary mandelic acid (biological indicator of styrene exposure) and the scores obtained on the POMS scales of tension-anxiety (Spearman's rank correlation rho = 0.30; p < 0.01), anger-hostility (rho = 0.29; p < 0.01), fatigue-inertie (rho = 0.34; p < 0.01), and confusion-bewilderment (rho = 0.23; p = 0.04), as well as the Psychological Distress Index (rho = 0.30; p < 0.01). All scores were adjusted for the effects of 4 potentially confounding variables: age, schooling, alcohol and cigarette consumption. These indicators of mood states do not constitute a diagnosis of mental disease but reveal progressive deterioration of well being associated with neurotoxic exposure in the workplace.
...
PMID:[Mental health deterioration in workers exposed to styrene]. 885 39

We explored perimenstrual symptoms among 16 Chinese women in an urban area of southeastern China using a retrospective questionnaire, the Menstrual Distress Questionnaire (MDQ), and a prospective daily symptom diary, the Daily Health Diary (DHD), modified for cultural relevance. Mean scores on the DHD were significantly (p < .03) higher during the perimenstrual phase for the symptoms fatigue, increased sensitivity to cold, increased sleeping, abdominal pain/discomfort, painful or tender breasts, and decreased sexual desire. The women who reported higher DHD physical symptom scores prospectively were more likely to recall more severe physical symptoms retrospectively on the MDQ. However, there were remarkable discrepancies between the DHD and MDQ regarding psychoemotional symptoms. By retrospective MDQ, the percentages of women who experienced severe mood swings and irritability ranged from 13% to 25% during the premenstrual and menstrual phases; on the DHDs, however, these emotional symptoms were not statistically associated with the menstrual cycle. The failure of prospective charting to confirm the retrospective reports of cyclic psychoemotional symptoms agrees with findings of studies of U.S. samples. We conclude that perimenstrual distress in Chinese women may be affected by the data collection methods.
...
PMID:Perimenstrual symptoms among Chinese women in an urban area of China. 885 18

The aim of the study was to assess the psychological impact of nipple pain in lactating women. Forty-eight lactating women with nipple pain completed mood scales at their first visit and following resolution of their pain, and 65 lactating women without nipple pain completed one set of mood scales. At the first visit, the mean score on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) in the nipple pain group was 12.4 and the control group was 7.6 (p < 0.0001). Eighteen women (38%) scored above the threshold for depression (> 12), compared to nine in the control group (14%): p < 0.01. Following pain resolution, the mean score on the EPDS decreased to 7.3 (p < 0.001); and six women (16%) scored 13 or over on the EPDS, significantly less than initially (p < 0.05). Similarly, on the Profile of Mood States (POMS), the nipple pain group scored significantly higher than control group on all mood factors (Tension, Depression, Fatigue, Confusion, Vigor [lower]), except Anger which did not reach a level of significance. After pain resolution, POMS scores returned to similar levels as the control group. In conclusion, both the EPDS and POMS indicated women with nipple pain were experiencing high levels of emotional distress. However, once the pain had resolved their distress also resolved.
...
PMID:Psychological aspects of nipple pain in lactating women. 886 Aug 87


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