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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This is a pilot study comparing the
emotional distress
of patients receiving an intensified conditioning regimen (radioimmunotherapy=RIT) with patients receiving conventional conditioning for allogeneic stem cell transplantation. In total, 53 patients (18 received RIT) were given two questionnaires designed to measure
emotional distress
(HADS, POMS) before starting conditioning (t1) and at discharge (t2). During the in-patient period, patients answered questions daily relating to physical distress, psychological distress, and how they were "coping with the situation". At t2, the transplant team assessed the manner in which the patients were coping. The data displayed no relevant differences with regard to
emotional distress
between the two groups, both at t1 and t2. For both groups, anxiety and vigor decreased and
fatigue
increased between t1 and t2. On average, perceived distress was higher for those patients being treated with RIT during the in-patient time, but the differences between both groups were significant only regarding physical distress during the recovery period. No difference was found for the transplant team's assessment. We hypothesize that an intensified conditioning regimen with RIT per se has only a small distressing effect on the patients' psyche during their stay at the hospital. Differences between both groups probably result from independent factors such as, for example, the patients' pre-existing health conditions.
...
PMID:Psychological distress of patients undergoing intensified conditioning with radioimmunotherapy prior to allogeneic stem cell transplantation. 1582 60
This study investigated symptoms, related factors, and consequences of menstrual distress in adolescent girls with dysmenorrhea. A total of 198 participants were recruited by convenience sampling from a technical college in Tainan County, Taiwan. Four instruments were used to collect data: a Demographic Data Questionnaire, a Menstrual
Distress
Questionnaire, the Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire, and an Adolescent Menstrual Attitude Questionnaire. The top five symptoms of menstrual distress were cramps,
fatigue
, backache, swollen abdomen, and tender breasts. Results of stepwise multiple regression indicated that the best subsets for predicting adolescent menstrual distress, including age, mother's occupation, menstrual pain, and menstrual attitude, accounted for 59% of total variance. From the correlation analysis, the more severe the menstrual distress, the higher the impact on daily activities as well as the more frequent the absence from class and analgesic usage. The results of this study may provide a useful reference for school nurses designing menstrual health programs for adolescents.
...
PMID:Related factors and consequences of menstrual distress in adolescent girls with dysmenorrhea. 1587 37
In the palliative care setting, the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS) was developed for use in daily symptom assessment of palliative care patients. ESAS considers the presence and severity of nine symptoms common in cancer patients: pain,
tiredness
, nausea, depression, anxiety, drowsiness, appetite, well-being and shortness of breath plus an optional tenth symptom, which can be added by the patient. The aim of this study was to validate the Italian version of ESAS and to evaluate an easy quality of life monitoring system that uses a patient's self-rating symptom assessment in two different palliative care settings: in-patients and home patients. Eighty-three in-patients and 158 home care patients were enrolled. In the latter group, the Italian validated version of the Symptom
Distress
Scale (SDS) was also administered at the admission of the patients. The two groups of patients have similar median survival, demographic and clinical characteristics, symptom prevalence and overall distress score at baseline. ESAS shows a good concurrent validity with respect to SDS. The correlation between the physical items of ESAS and SDS was shown to be higher than the correlation between the psychological items. The association of ESAS scores and performance status (PS) showed a trend: the higher the symptom score was, the worse was the PS level. Test-retest evaluation, applied in the in-patient group, showed good agreement for depression, well-being and overall distress and a moderate agreement for all the other items. In conclusion, ESAS can be considered a valid, reliable and feasible instrument for physical symptom assessment in routine "palliative care" clinical practice with a potentially different responsiveness in different situations or care settings.
...
PMID:Edmonton symptom assessment scale: Italian validation in two palliative care settings. 1593 88
Fatigue
is the most common side effect of chemotherapy for cancer. Not yet explored is the possibility that patients may develop conditioned
fatigue
responses to clinic cues as a result of the repeated pairing of the clinic environment (conditioned stimulus) with infusions of chemotherapy (unconditioned stimulus) that cause
fatigue
(unconditioned response). As a first critical test of this possibility, breast cancer patients (N = 82) were studied across their first four cycles of chemotherapy. Consistent with conditioning: (1)
fatigue
levels in the clinic environment significantly increased with repeated pairings of the clinic environment and chemotherapy administration; (2)
fatigue
responses in the clinic environment prior to the fourth infusion (CR) were predicted by patients' previous experiences of post-infusion
fatigue
(UR) above and beyond effects of concurrent
emotional distress
. These results provide the first evidence in the literature that
fatigue
can be conditioned. Additional research is warranted to determine the clinical importance of this source of
fatigue
in chemotherapy patients.
...
PMID:Evidence for classically conditioned fatigue responses in patients receiving chemotherapy treatment for breast cancer. 1601 57
The purpose of this longitudinal study was to explore changes in symptom distress in newly diagnosed Taiwanese breast cancer patients during the initial 4-week postoperative period. The research instruments, including a demographic questionnaire and the Symptom
Distress
Scale, were used to obtain data on postoperative day 2 and at weeks 2, 3, and 4. In total, 39 patients with a mean age of 48 years participated in this study. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t tests, one-way ANOVA, and repeated-measures ANOVA. Results revealed that the level of symptom distress significantly decreased from postoperative day 2 to week 4. Loss of appetite and a poor outlook increased; nausea frequency,
fatigue
, and insomnia decreased then increased; and frequency and the level of pain, coughing, tightness/tenderness in the chest wall, weakness, and numbness in the arm of the operative side all decreased over the 4-week study period. Age, stage of disease, and type of surgery were all related to symptom distress. Results of this study may provide reassurances about what can be expected after breast cancer surgery.
...
PMID:Symptom distress changes during first postoperative month in newly diagnosed Taiwanese breast cancer patients: a longitudinal study. 1604 87
This qualitative study explores how children and adolescents with medically refractory seizures experience the impact of epilepsy on their quality of life (QOL) within the domains of physical, emotional/behavioral, social, and cognitive/academic function. Semi-structured, open-ended interviews were conducted with 49 participants (7-18 years old). These narratives constituted our data source. Analyses involved inductive generation of themes/subthemes and connection of these themes to generate a theoretical representation of their relationships. These themes reflected the negative impact of epilepsy on QOL: physical-excessive
fatigue
as a barrier to academic and social pursuits; emotional/behavioral-intermittent
emotional distress
heightened by epilepsy-related factors such as unpredictability of seizures; social-profound social isolation; and cognitive/academic-discontinuous, fragmented learning. Youths perceive seizures as the major barrier to their sense of normalcy, setting them apart from others. Findings provide direction for assessment and evidence for developing or enhancing clinical interventions and community/school-based programs that might mitigate some of these negative experiences.
...
PMID:I just want to be normal: a qualitative study exploring how children and adolescents view the impact of intractable epilepsy on their quality of life. 1614 May 94
Until recently, there was little empirical data regarding the psychological impact of screening for type 2 diabetes. There is now some progress in this area, as evidenced by emerging population based studies reporting on the effects of screening for type 2 diabetes on perceived health status and well-being. Recent studies from our own and other groups show that the diagnosis type 2 diabetes has no substantial adverse or positive effect on the participants' perceived health status and well-being after notification of the test result. Importantly, screening-detected type 2 diabetes patients beforehand perceive their risk for type 2 diabetes to be low, despite the presence of risk factors, such as obesity, hypertension and a family history, and overall report low levels of diabetes-related symptom distress. Yet, screening-detected type 2 diabetes patients were bothered more by symptoms of hyperglycaemia and
fatigue
in the first year following diagnosis type 2 diabetes than non-diabetics. On the basis of research to date, we conclude that screening for type 2 diabetes in the general population has no serious psychological side effects. Whether lack of emotional response to screening, is because of unawareness or indifference, needs further investigation. Future studies should be aiming towards a better understanding of how to raise the awareness and understanding of type 2 diabetes and its risk factors in high-risk individuals, while avoiding or minimizing negative effects, such as
emotional distress
and denial. The growing number of younger people developing type 2 diabetes warrants further research into labeling effects of an early diagnosis.
...
PMID:The psychological impact of screening for type 2 diabetes. 1614 14
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the impact of palliative care on patients' symptoms, using the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS) to measure symptom intensity at the time of admission and variations registered during the first 7 days' hospitalization. Three hundred fourteen patients were admitted to the unit during its first year of activity. Of these, 162 patients (51.6%) completed, 62 (19.7%) partially completed, and 90 (28.7%) did not complete the ESAS. The mean (+/-SD) value of the Symptom
Distress
Score (SDS) (sum of the values of the different symptoms) for the 162 evaluable patients on Day 1 was 33.93 (+/-16.24). On Day 7 the mean was 28.14 (+/-15.11) (ANOVA for repeated measurements, P < 0.0001). ESAS values for patients with moderate-severe symptom intensity (average values Day 1-Day 7 and P value, ANOVA for repeated measurements) were as follows: pain (7.12-4.23, P < 0.0001),
fatigue
(7.46-5.68, P < 0.0001), nausea (7.12-1.96, P < 0.0001), depression (7.26-5.28, P < 0.0001), anxiety (7.13-5.14, P < 0.0001), drowsiness (7.42-6.40, P = 0.002), anorexia (7.33-4.33, P < 0.0001), well-being (6.83-3.85, P < 0.0001), and dyspnea (7.08-3.86, P < 0.0001). These data seem to indicate that the patients who benefit most from inpatient palliative care are those with the most complex symptomatology.
...
PMID:Impact of palliative care unit admission on symptom control evaluated by the edmonton symptom assessment system. 1625 1
The Kessler 10 Psychological
Distress
Scale (K10) is a brief 10-item questionnaire designed to measure the level of distress and severity associated with psychological symptoms in population surveys. It is being used widely, including in the World Health Organization World Mental Health Survey, and as a clinical outcome measure, although little information is available about the structure of the measure. The factorial composition of the K10 was examined in a prospective community survey and cross-validated in a separate large community survey. The K10 was found to consist of 4 factors and a 2-factor second-order factor structure. This was stable across the 2 waves of the prospective study and the Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being. The 4 factors, labeled Nervous, Negative Affect,
Fatigue
, and Agitation, were consistent with the original scales from which the items were taken. The 2 second-order factors represent Depression and Anxiety.
...
PMID:Factor structure and interpretation of the K10. 1659 13
Cancer-related
fatigue
(CRF) is a significant clinical symptom. Effective assessment of CRF attributes from the patients' perspective is essential. This study tested the psychometric properties of the Wu Cancer Fatigue Scale (WCFS). A total of 172 outpatients with breast cancer, who were at various stages and on various chemotherapy regimens, and were undergoing treatment at one of three cancer clinics in a Midwest metropolitan area, participated in this study. The participants were instructed to complete four instruments in the following order: the 16-item WCFS, Schwartz Cancer Fatigue Scale (SCFS), Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), and Cancer-Related
Fatigue
Distress
Scale (CRFDS). Structural equation modeling (LISREL 8.54) supported the one-factor measurement model with nine items remaining. Nonsignificant Satorra-Bentler Scaled Chi-square (27)=32.52, P=0.21, standardized root mean square residual=0.032, nonnormal fit index=0.97, comparative fit index=0.98, and incremental fit index=0.98 indicated a good model fit. Convergent validity with the SCFS was 0.78, concurrent validity with the GDS was 0.60, and predictive validity with the CRFDS was 0.73. Internal consistency reliability was alpha=0.91 for the nine-item scale. The revised WCFS is a reliable and valid instrument that aims to measure the subjective characteristics of CRF from the patients' perspective. It may prove useful in both clinical and research settings.
...
PMID:Assessing fatigue in persons with cancer: further validation of the Wu Cancer Fatigue Scale. 1693 50
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