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56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Undoubtedly the commonest psychiatric conditions seen in patients from the tropics are reactive depression and hysterical illness. These may both be seen as responses to stress, often over a prolonged period. Although typical depressive and hysterical syndromes are seen in all races, severe tiredness seems to be the principal hysterical symptom amongst Europeans as opposed to bizarre somatic symptoms in Negroes and Asians. Headaches are an important depressive sign in Negroes and Asians. Diarrhoea and abdominal pains may be linked directly to anxiety and depression or may emerge as an unconscious defence against insoluble problems.
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PMID:A study of the symptom patterns of psychiatric referrals in a tropical diseases unit. 100 61

A method of sequential electrical stimulation to certain acupuncture loci was found to be effective in the treatment of stress related physical and mental disorders. Recent research found that cerebral serotonin has anti-depressant and analgesic effects. It was reported that cerebral serotonin can be released by the stimulation of certain acupuncture loci. Omura reported that the stimulation of ST36 and GB20 increased intracephalic blood flow. Increasing intracephalic blood flow may indirectly increase the quantity of serotonin released. The release of serotonin can be enhanced further by sequential stimulation of these acupuncture loci. A marked degree of mental relaxation by SEA was shown in this study of 85 clinical cases of chronic physical disorders, e.g. intractable pain, headache, with most disorders complicated by reactive depression. Some of the cases were psycho-somatic disorders. The percentage of improvement from slight to remarkable between mental disorders (78.8%) and physical disorders (77.1%) is about equal. The method of treatment and schematic of the SEA device are discussed and shown.
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PMID:An introduction to sequential electric acupuncture (SEA) in the treatment of stress related physical and mental disorders. 136 37

Research on the short-term effects of psychological interventions in migraine indicates improvement rates of 50 percent. Yet long-term follow-ups are scarce: the studies extending to three years provide evidence for the maintenance of effects, but these studies evaluate the benefits of rather complex psychological treatments and the samples include other types of headache. We compared the effects of single-method psychological interventions upon migraine. The study reports results obtained from 24 patients three years after completion of relaxation training, which is a psychophysiological regimen, and stress-coping training, which is a cognitive-behavioral regimen. Results for the complete sample, excluding data biased by confounding factors, provide clear evidence of the preservation of effects in migraine. Relaxation training (RT) and stress-coping training (SCT) were equally effective and both groups exhibited little medication consumption since completion of training. Among the secondary effects, SCT was found to improve assertiveness and active problem solving, and to decrease depressive reaction. The study yielded two predictor variables--little external stress for relaxation training, and high self motivation for stress-coping training--that accounted for more than 50 percent of the effect variance in the respective groups. Although more research is needed to substantiate our findings, the results suggest that, thus far, there is little reason to favor multimodal training or more complex psychological treatments over single-method psychological interventions in migraine. Also, our results do not support the assumed superiority of cognitive-behavioral treatment over psychophysiological treatment. Research on factors predicting long-term effects of psychological interventions in migraine may profit from considering separate variables on skill rehearsal and skill employment (instead of employing a global measure of home practice), and from a measure for post-training external stress.
Headache 1989 Feb
PMID:Long-term effects of training in relaxation and stress-coping in patients with migraine: a 3-year follow-up. 265 55

A 47-year-old woman was thirdly admitted to our hospital for therapy to multi-drug resistant tuberculosis of the lung in June 88. Although she was treated with TH, PAS and EVM, M. tuberculosis were positive constantly in her sputum. She complained of sleep disturbance, irritability, headache on September 89, she was diagnosed reactive depression. But her symptoms were progressive, low level of intelligence test in November, apatic in December and became spastic paralysis and vegetable state at next year. She was died of pneumonia in November 90. Her autopsy findings showed no brain atrophy nor meningitis. Microscopically, central chromatolysis were showed in Betz cells and anterior horn cells, these findings sometimes suspected for Peragulla, but we could not obtained definite pathological diagnosis, because we could not have been obtained findings indicating for Peragulla. Finally, we reported the clinical course and autopsy findings of dementia occurred during therapy for multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis.
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PMID:[A dementia occurred during therapy for multi-drug resistant pulmonary tuberculosis]. 823 Sep 59

Joint hypermobility syndrome (JHS), or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) hypermobility type (EDS-HT), is a underdiagnosed heritable connective tissue disorder characterized by generalized joint hypermobility and a wide range of visceral, pelvic, neurologic, and cognitive dysfunctions. Deterioration of quality of life is mainly associated with pain and fatigue. Except for the recognized effectiveness of physiotherapy for some musculoskeletal features, there are no standardized guidelines for the assessment and treatment of pain and fatigue. In this work, a practical classification of pain presentations and factors contributing in generating painful sensations in JHS/EDS-HT is proposed. Pain can be topographically classified in articular limb (acute/subacute and chronic), muscular limb (myofascial and fibromyalgia), neuropathic limb, back/neck, abdominal and pelvic pain, and headache. For selected forms of pain, specific predisposing characteristics are outlined. Fatigue appears as the result of multiple factors, including muscle weakness, respiratory insufficiency, unrefreshing sleep, dysautonomia, intestinal malabsorption, reactive depression/anxiety, and excessive use of analgesics. A set of lifestyle recommendations to instruct patients as well as specific investigations aimed at characterizing pain and fatigue are identified. Available treatment options are discussed in the set of a structured multidisciplinary approach based on reliable outcome tools.
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PMID:Management of pain and fatigue in the joint hypermobility syndrome (a.k.a. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, hypermobility type): principles and proposal for a multidisciplinary approach. 2278 15

The aim of this study was to examine the gender differences in the prevalence of somatoform disorders among a sample of Qatari patients who were visiting primary health care centers and to investigate the severity of diagnostic categories and the most frequent somatic symptoms in these patients. The first stage of the study was conducted with the help of general practitioners, using the somatic symptom module of the Patient Health Questionnaire 12-item General Health Questionnaire. Overall, 2320 subjects were approached, and a total of 1689 patients, of whom 892 were men and 797 were women, agreed to participate in the study. The prevalence rate of somatoform disorders among the total screened sample was 23.9%. The prevalence rate was slightly higher in Qatari women (24.2%) than in Qatari men (23.7%). Housewives (43.5%) and men in administrative posts (37.9%) reported higher somatic symptoms compared to other professions. Prolonged depressive reaction was significantly higher in women compared to men (P = .003). There was a significant gender difference in certain psychiatric diagnostic categories such as depressive episode, recurrent depressive disorder, dysthymia, and brief depressive reaction. Backache was the most common reported symptom in men, whereas headache was more common in women. The present study revealed that the prevalence of somatoform disorders in Qatar is as high as the overall prevalence reported in prior studies done in other primary care settings. The prevalence of somatoform disorders was slightly higher in Qatari women than in men.
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PMID:Gender differences in prevalence of somatoform disorders in patients visiting primary care centers. 2380 67