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We have observed a high frequency of chronic Candida albicans infection and of allergic sensitization to candida among patients with normocalcemic latent tetany (LT). Among 50 LT patients, 34% suffered from recurrent or chronic candida infection by history, 24% showed evidence of active infection and 48% demonstrated type I hypersensitivity to C. albicans extract on intradermal testing. Treatment with oral antifungal drugs and allergy desensitization to Candida produced complete relief of symptoms in 44% of the patients, with remission occurring for symptoms of depression, irritable bowel syndrome, fatigue, premenstrual tension, headache, anxiety and back pain. The complex relationship between candidiasis and Mg deficit is discussed. Patients with LT, refractory symptoms and a history of prolonged antibiotic exposure or recurrent candida infection should be considered for oral antifungal therapy and candida desensitization.
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PMID:Normocalcemic tetany and candidiasis. 391 83

Clinical evidence for the long-term effectiveness of biofeedback related relaxation training is accumulating. The purpose of this report is to describe the population, self-regulation procedure, outcome criteria, and final outcome for patients who received Quieting Response (QR) training. Data from 340 patients who completed at least the first follow-up at 3 months is presented. Primary presenting symptoms were headaches, 72%; primary and secondary Raynaud's, 14%; hypertension, 4%; irritable colon, 4%; and miscellaneous, 6%. QR training integrated EMG and thermal feedback with deep breathing, progressive relaxation, and autogenic exercises presented on cassette tapes. Eight 1-hour weekly sessions were given, with emphasis on daily home exercises. Follow-up evaluations were at 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years. Outcome was based on change in frequency, severity, and duration of symptoms; changes in medication; and secondary benefits. Quieting Response training was found to be most beneficial for patients with primary Raynaud's disease (18 of 23 patients, or 78% successful), classic migraines (9 of 13, or 69%), and common migraines (20 of 32, or 62%), followed by mixed headaches (79 of 131, or 60%), Raynaud's plus other symptoms (9 of 15, or 60%), and the irritable colon syndrome (7 of 13, or 54%). Less successful were patients with headaches plus other symptoms (16 of 37, or 43%), muscle contraction headaches (13 of 33, or 39%), secondary Raynaud's phenomenon (4 of 10, or 40%), and essential hypertension (5 of 15, or 33%). Speculations about the differing outcomes across symptom groups were made.
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PMID:Quieting response training: long-term evaluation of a clinical biofeedback practice. 635 89

Detailed clinical study of 50 patients with primary fibromyalgia and 50 normal matched controls has shown a characteristic syndrome. Primary fibromyalgia patients are usually females, aged 25-40 yr, who complain of diffuse musculoskeletal aches, pains or stiffness associated with tiredness, anxiety, poor sleep, headaches, irritable bowel syndrome, subjective swelling in the articular and periarticular areas and numbness. Physical examination is characterized by presence of multiple tender points at specific sites and absence of joint swelling. Symptoms are influenced by weather and activities, as well as by time of day(worse in the morning and the evening). In contrast, symptoms of psychogenic rheumatism patients have little fluctuation, if any, and are modulated by emotional rather than physical factors. In psychogenic rheumatism, there is diffuse tenderness rather than tender points at specific sites. Laboratory tests and roentgenologic findings in primary fibromyalgia are normal or negative. Primary fibromyalgia should be suspected by the presence of its own characteristic features, and not diagnosed just by the absence of other recognizable conditions. This study has also shown that primary fibromyalgia is a poorly recognized condition. Patients were usually seen by many physicians who failed to provide a definite diagnosis despite frequent unnecessary investigations. A guideline for diagnosis of primary fibromyalgia, based upon our observations, is suggested. Management is usually gratifying in these frustrated patients. The most important aspects are a definite diagnosis, explanation of the various possible mechanisms responsible for the symptoms, and reassurance regarding the benign nature of this condition. A combination of reassurance, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, good sleep, local tender point injections, and various modes of physical therapy is successful in most cases.
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PMID:Primary fibromyalgia (fibrositis): clinical study of 50 patients with matched normal controls. 694 96

Long-term follow-up evidence for biofeedback treatment of headaches, Raynaud's disease, essential hypertension, and the irritable bowel syndrome was reviewed. Acknowledging the difficulties with cross-study comparisons, the following general success rate were determined: primary idiopathic Raynaud's disease--70%, or better; vascular headache--70%, or better; mixed headache--about 60%; and muscle contraction headache--50%, or less. With relatively fewer patients, successful outcomes with the irritable bowel syndrome and secondary Raynaud's phenomenon were roughly 60% and 40%, respectively. Few cases of clinically significant long-term decreases in diastolic blood pressure were demonstrated; however, the need for medication was reduced or eliminated in some patients. There were indications that biofeedback combined with psychotherapy resulted in highest success rates. No differences were found in effectiveness between biofeedback, other relaxation techniques, and biofeedback in combination with relaxation techniques--all had essentially comparable rates of success. No correlations between physiological and psychological measures of condition at follow-up were reported. Implications and interpretations of these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Biofeedback treatment for headaches, Raynaud's disease, essential hypertension, and irritable bowel syndrome: a review of the long-term follow-up literature. 716 83

Perceived social support was assessed among 53 patients suffering from non-life-threatening chronic illnesses (i.e., irritable bowel syndrome or recurrent headache). Subjects recalled predominantly helpful support interactions and reported the three major types of social support as equally helpful. In addition, irritable bowel syndrome patients, who experience embarrassing physical symptoms, reported fewer instances of tangible assistance than chronic headache patients. Comparisons to cancer patients studied by Dakof and Taylor (1990) revealed differences in perceived social support as a function of diagnosis. These results offer insight into the needs of patients with noncatastrophic illnesses and suggest that the challenges and tasks confronting these individuals are unique from those encountered by patients with catastrophic diseases.
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PMID:Specificity in social support: perceptions of helpful and unhelpful provider behaviors among irritable bowel syndrome, headache, and cancer patients. 780 38

It was investigated whether central pain mechanisms including the endogenous antinociceptive system were involved in functional dyspepsia defined as: abdominal pain without abnormal findings. Pain sensitivity was measured by an ischaemic pain test comparing 21 functional dyspepsia patients with two control groups: 1) 24 patients with organic abdominal pain, and 2) 13 healthy pain-free controls. The endogenous opioids beta-endorphin, met-enkephalin immunoreactivity, and dynorphin immunoreactivity were measured in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from nine patients with functional dyspepsia and pain-free controls undergoing minor surgery while under spinal analgesia. There was no significant difference between the groups in pain sensitivity, but subdivision of the functional dyspepsia group showed that individuals with pain and no symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) were significantly more sensitive to ischaemic pain than functional dyspepsia patients with IBS. The CSF beta-endorphfin concentration was significantly decreased in the functional dyspepsia group as compared with the controls. There were no significant group differences regarding met-enkephalin immunoreactivity and dynorphin immunoreactivity. Because of post-lumbar-puncture headache, this part of the investigation was suspended after nine patients. Functional dyspepsia is probably a pain syndrome with decreased central antinociceptive activity.
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PMID:[Reduced concentration of beta-endorphin in cerebrospinal fluid and reduced pain tolerance in patients with functional dyspepsia]. 783 29

We investigated whether central pain mechanisms including the endogenous antinociceptive system are involved in functional abdominal pain--that is, abdominal pain without abnormal findings at routine examinations. beta-Endorphin, met-enkephalin immunoreactivity, and dynorphin immunoreactivity were measured in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from nine patients with long-lasting functional abdominal pain and nine pain-free controls undergoing minor surgery while under spinal analgesia. Furthermore, pain sensitivity was evaluated with an ischaemic pain test comparing 21 functional abdominal pain patients with two control groups: 1) 24 patients with organic abdominal pain due to duodenal ulcer, gallstone, or urinary tract calculi, and 2) 13 healthy pain-free controls. The CSF beta-endorphin concentration was significantly decreased in the functional abdominal pain group as compared with nine matched controls (P = 0.01). Met-enkephalin and dynorphin immunoreactivities were normal. This part of the investigation was suspended after nine patients had been tested, because of post-lumbar-puncture headache. With regard to pain sensitivity, no significant difference between the three groups was shown, but subdivision of the functional abdominal pain group showed that individuals with pain and no symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) were significantly more sensitive to pain than functional abdominal pain patients with IBS and healthy controls (P = 0.04).
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PMID:Decreased cerebrospinal fluid beta-endorphin and increased pain sensitivity in patients with functional abdominal pain. 790 92

Chronic musculoskeletal pain syndromes are common problems, but the etiology, pathogenesis, and pathology of many of them are very poorly understood. Because the currently used nomenclature suggests an understanding that we do not have, I propose that names like "myofascial pain," "tension myalgia," and "FM" be abandoned in favor of the more indefinite (but more honest) terms like "regional" and "generalized rheumatism." No matter what we rheumatologists call it, however, the condition of chronic generalized musculoskeletal pain probably is only one part of an even more generalized condition that includes IBS, chronic headaches, regional migratory numbness, TMJ syndrome, and a whole host of other somatic pain syndromes. The same patients end up seeing many specialists who themselves feel frustrated with the labels at their disposal, and these specialists end up resembling the blind men confronting the elephant. In this regard, the new ACR criteria for the diagnosis of fibrositis, by emphasizing tenderness and ignoring the presence of these other syndromes, are too circumscribed and represent a step backward in our attempts to understand. Although the chronic rheumatisms are problems difficult to manage and frustrating for both the patient and the physician, when patience can be applied and confidence achieved, a positive relationship can result and the patient can be helped.
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PMID:Fibromyalgia and the rheumatisms. Common sense and sensibility. 835 61

Variable blood pressure responses, manifesting either as a "white-coat" phenomenon or lability between office visits, confound hypertension management decisions. An attempt was made to determine whether these phenomena are associated with concurrent diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction, therefore mitigating against antihypertensive medical therapy. Forty-seven patients with such variable blood pressure responses were identified in a rural family practice over a three-year period and compared to randomly selected age- and sex-matched controls for the following concurrent diagnoses: generalized anxiety, psychogenic spastic bladder, panic disorder, depression, alcohol use, chronic headache, fibromyalgia, temporomandibular joint syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, and premenstrual syndrome. No statistical associations between white-coat hypertension and these diagnoses were demonstrated although a small sample size tempers conclusions. However, chi-square analysis (P < 0.01) of the phenomenon characterized by lability of blood pressure between different office visits demonstrated a statistical association with alcoholic hepatitis in men. White-coat hypertension is a diagnosis that may warrant disassociation from other psychosocial disorders, although further study is indicated. Physicians should remain attuned to the presence of lability of blood pressure in males and consider possible associations with alcoholism.
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PMID:A pilot study of white-coat and labile hypertension: associations with diagnoses of psychosocial dysfunction. 848 44

The autopsy report of Ludwig van Beethoven written by Dr Johann Wagner in 1827 reveals that he had renal calculi that had not been diagnosed during his lifetime, together with perirenal fibrosis. The most comprehensive interpretation of this autopsy finding is that the regular calcareous deposits in every one of his renal calices represented calcified necrotic papillae. Severe urinary obstruction or diabetes as possible causes of papillary necrosis were not present. Analgesic abuse because of headaches, back pain, and attacks of rheumatism or gout may be presumed on the basis of Beethoven's uncontrolled way of taking medication. Salicin, a commonly used analgesic substance of that time (dried and powdered willow bark), is able to cause papillary necrosis. Perirenal fibrosis may be due to chronic infection or drug intake. Beethoven's other well-known diseases are deafness caused by otosclerosis of the inner ear, relapsing attacks of diarrhea as the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome, and liver cirrhosis following viral hepatitis and chronic alcohol consumption. Liver cirrhosis also may cause papillary necrosis. In Beethoven's case, renal papillary necrosis was most probably the consequence of analgesic abuse together with decompensated liver cirrhosis. The autopsy report of Beethoven is the first case of papillary necrosis recorded in the literature.
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PMID:Beethoven's renal disease based on his autopsy: a case of papillary necrosis. 850 20


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