Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The exteroceptive suppression period (ES) of the temporalis muscle activity is a trigemino-trigeminal brain stem reflex. It will be elicited most when stimulating trigeminal sensory afferents by painful stimuli and typically leads to a biphasic interruption of voluntary muscle activity. The first phase of decreased voluntary activity is called the early exteroceptive suppression period (ES1), the second, the late exteroceptive suppression period (ES2). Between these two suppression periods a phase of increased muscle activity, the so-called facilitation period (FP), can be seen. This phenomenon can be modulated by different stimulating parameters and usually, in healthy subjects, this normal pattern of the exteroceptive suppression can be elicited regularly. The reflex answer may occur at low non-painful stimulus intensities; typically, however, it appears to be most pronounced with high-intensity stimuli. Because of the obvious relationship between stimulus intensity, pain perception and reflex, the reflex is regarded as an antinociceptive reaction. The absence of an inhibition of motor activity can be visualized, for example, in hemimasticatory spasm or dystonic disorders. However, above all the ES nowadays attracts most attention as a tool to analyse different pain syndromes. One main advantage of this method in man is the ability to evaluate certain antinociceptive brain stem mechanisms functionally by means of a simple noninvasive technique. A large number of results have been obtained showing that chronic pain syndromes such as chronic tension-type headache and migraine cause changes within the normal ES recording pattern. Furthermore, some substances used in pain therapy, such as serotonin agonists or antagonists, acetylsalicylic acid or naloxone, may also alter the general appearance of the ES. This review will summarize different parameters that influence the ES reflex answer. Furthermore, the diagnostic value of changes in the ES for pathophysiological processes regarding pain perception and processing in certain pain syndromes will be discussed.
...
PMID:[Exteroceptive suppression of activity of the temporal muscle. Principles and applications]. 903 58

Stress has long been viewed as a contributor to the pain experienced by chronic pain patients. The purpose of this research was to study the relationship between anticipated and experienced stress and anticipated and experienced pain levels among three patient groups: chronic pain patients, patients about to receive molar extraction (acute pain group), and a no-pain comparison group. Results showed that chronic pain patients anticipated significantly more stress than did an acute pain or a non-pain comparison patient group but reported non-significant differences in the actual level of stress experienced. A secondary purpose of this study was to examine cognitive factors, such as perceived daily hassles, which may contribute to this increased anticipatory stress. Results showed that there was consistency among the chronic pain patients as to the types of anticipated stressors, which were similar to those previously reported by chronic headache sufferers. The chronic pain group had significantly higher scores than the two remaining groups on the stress they anticipated from hassles related both to practical considerations (F2.45 = 3.5, p < 0.05) and to health (F2.45 = 9.37, p < 0.001). Strategies the dentist can use in combination with dental therapy to reduce cognitive-based anticipatory stress as well as strategies for collaboration with the patient and a mental health therapist are discussed.
...
PMID:Anticipatory stress reduction among chronic pain patients. 908 27

Chronic abacterial prostatitis has all the hallmarks of a chronic pain syndrome without having been identified as such, either in the urology literature or in the pain literature. This review proposes that this common urological syndrome merits consideration as a 'chronic pain syndrome', as it is commonly defined. The presentation of this syndrome in PAIN results from the unlikely collaboration of a clinical psychologist and a urologist with an interest in exploring unconventional assessment and treatment recommendations for the patients he saw in a university-based Prostatitis Clinic. In addition to providing a review of the chronic prostatitis syndrome as it appears in the urology literature, we surveyed the journal, PAIN, from 1985 through 1995 to identify the 'body parts' specifically named in titles of articles on non-malignant pain. There was only one case study report on male genital or urological pain. Similar to other more commonly accepted chronic pain syndromes, chronic abacterial prostatitis has the following characteristics: pain as a primary complaint, low correspondence between symptoms and medical findings, a history of multiple, unsuccessful treatments. The consequence of recognizing this very common urological syndrome as a chronic pain syndrome is that a large group of symptomatic men for whom urologists have little to offer stands to benefit from a different perspective. Experience with other chronic pain syndromes, including back pain and headaches; has shown that interventions based on a multidisciplinary approach can prove complementary to traditional 'organ system' approaches to treatment of these frustrated, and frustrating, patients.
...
PMID:Chronic abacterial prostatitis--a urological chronic pain syndrome? 951 69

A literature review concerning the relationships between motor vehicle accidents and temporomandibular disorders, whiplash, headache, neck pain, and litigation was undertaken. The review shows that many patients recover or resume work prior to settlement, but most unsuccessfully treated patients do not generally recover following the settlement of legal claims; the postinjury problems are not strictly psychologic. Litigating patients and nonlitigating patients are often not dramatically different in most important regards (including pain and return to work), with litigating patients deserving the same treatment as other patients with chronic pain. It was found that postinjury neck symptoms and headaches can be persistent. Employment appears to be a better predictor of long-term outcome than compensation and litigation. In addition, limited consensus is available concerning prognostic factors. Patients with postinjury temporomandibular disorders tend to respond less well to treatment than do noninjury patients with temporomandibular disorders, as do litigating compared to nonlitigating temporomandibular disorders patients, but a cause and effect relationship is not known. The incidence of temporomandibular disorders following motor vehicle accidents may not be as high as has been claimed in whiplash cases. More research is required in the area of temporomandibular disorders, motor vehicle accidents, and litigation.
...
PMID:Temporomandibular disorders, headaches, and neck pain following motor vehicle accidents and the effect of litigation: review of the literature. 913 56

Researchers have increasingly demonstrated that 15% to 30% of all women have been sexually abused as children. Information on the emotional, behavioral, and cognitive sequelae of this abuse has been available. Most recently, a literature on the somatic and medical sequelae has developed. This article reviews this literature and discusses its implications for primary care providers. Survivors are likely to suffer from insomnia, gastrointestinal problems, obesity, chronic pain, headache, and somatization, and they are frequent utilizers of primary care services. Specific suggestions about history taking, physical examination, and referrals are given to ensure that survivors receive care that is sensitive, supportive, and competent. The article also discusses the dynamics of abuse and how they relate to the ongoing relationship between the primary care provider and the survivor of sexual abuse.
...
PMID:The sequelae of childhood sexual abuse: a primary care focus for adult female survivors. 923 50

Central excitatory circuits could be involved in the pathophysiology of pain; particularly, the genesis of chronic pain. The "second pain" is the sensation that follows the initial pain after an appropriate nociceptive stimulus. The second pain is amplified by repeating the stimulus after brief intervals (temporal summation). This phenomenon is the psychophysical correlate of the excitatory pain circuits. The temporal summation of the second pain was evaluated in four groups of subjects; one group affected by migraine without aura, one by episodic tension headache, one by chronic daily headache, and a group of healthy subjects. A percutaneous electrical shock was used as the nociceptive stimulus. The intensity of the second pain was significantly greater in the group of patients with chronic headache in comparison with the other groups. The patients with chronic headache were subdivided into three groups on the basis of their clinical history: a group with transformed migraine; a group with chronic headache ab initio, a form related to the first one; (both groups suffered from chronic daily headache with a frequent superimposition of episodes of migraine attacks) and the third group consisted of patients with chronic tension headache. The temporal summation of the second pain was altered in the first two groups. The patients with chronic migraine abused ergotamine given as a symptomatic drug. Those who were able to discontinue this drug were retested and reported a decrease of the second pain in comparison to the previous measurements. The results of the present study indicate that central excitatory circuits could be involved in the mechanism leading to the development of chronic daily headache.
Headache 1997 Sep
PMID:Alteration of central excitation circuits in chronic headache and analgesic misuse. 932 30

A study was conducted to investigate chronic pain patterns in Vietnam veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Combat veterans with PTSD completed standardized PTSD severity, pain, somatization, and depression measures. Of 129 consecutive out-patient combat veterans with PTSD, 80% reported chronic pain. In descending order were limb pain (83%), back pain (77%), torso pain (50%), and headache pain (32%). Compared to PTSD combat veterans without chronic pain, PTSD veterans who reported chronic pain reported significantly higher somatization as measured by the Minnesota Multiphasic Inventory 2 hypochondriasis and hysteria subscales. In the sample of 103 combat veterans with PTSD and chronic pain, MMPI 2 hypochondriasis scores and B PTSD symptoms (reexperiencing symptoms) were significantly related to pain disability, overall pain index, and current pain level MMPI 2 hypochondriasis and depression scores were also significantly related to percent body pain. These results are discussed in the context of current conceptualizations of PTSD.
...
PMID:Chronic posttraumatic stress disorder and chronic pain in Vietnam combat veterans. 933 Feb 37

Fourteen children (10 boys and 4 girls, aged 8 to 17 years) had 20 pheochromocytomas treated over a 36-year period from 1959 to 1995 inclusive. Nine patients had 11 tumors before 1980; 5 children had 9 tumors up to 1987. There were no new children with pheochromocytomas at our hospital from 1988 to 1995. Hypertension, sweating, headache, and visual blurring were the most common symptoms and signs (average 5 months). The most reliable biochemical investigations were the urinary catecholamines and norepinephrine. Before 1980, intravenous pyelography and angiography were most successful in localizing the tumor, but since then ultrasonography and computerized tomography have been the radiological investigations of choice. Early involvement of the anesthesiologist in the preoperative control of the hypertension is essential; blood pressure (BP) control was achieved with phenoxybenzamine. The main anesthetic drugs used were: sodium thiopental, fentanyl, methoxyflurane, isoflurane, nitrous oxide, and metocurine. Sixteen tumors were adrenal and 4 were extra-adrenal (1 intrathoracic and 1 extradural). All except 2 tumors were completely resected; they ranged in size from 1.3 to 14 cm. Ligation of the tumor's venous drainage was usually associated with a sudden, temporary fall in systemic BP. There were 2 children with malignant tumors. Four patients had five recurrences (second pheochromocytoma) within 6 years, and all were heralded by a return of their original symptoms and signs. One girl was left with no adrenal tissue. The only complication was in a boy with a large, partly-resected malignant right adrenal tumor who had a subphrenic abscess drained and was left with a temporary bile fistula, cirrhosis, and chronic pain. All children were normotensive when discharged from hospital and remain alive and well with a follow-up of 7 to 36 years. There were no deaths. Long-term follow-up is essential. Key word Pheochromocytoma
...
PMID:Pediatric pheochromocytoma. A 36-year review. 935 33

Among the various methods of application techniques in low level laser therapy (LLLT) (HeNe 632.8 nm visible red or infrared 820-830 nm continuous wave and 904 nm pulsed emission) there are very promising "trigger points" (TPs), i.e., myofascial zones of particular sensibility and of highest projection of focal pain points, due to ischemic conditions. The effect of LLLT and the results obtained after clinical treatment of more than 200 patients (headaches and facial pain, skeletomuscular ailments, myogenic neck pain, shoulder and arm pain, epicondylitis humery, tenosynovitis, low back and radicular pain, Achilles tendinitis) to whom the "trigger points" were applied were better than we had ever expected. According to clinical parameters, it has been observed that the rigidity decreases, the mobility is restored (functional recovery), and the spontaneous or induced pain decreases or even disappears, by movement, too. LLLT improves local microcirculation and it can also improve oxygen supply to hypoxic cells in the TP areas and at the same time it can remove the collected waste products. The normalization of the microcirculation, obtained due to laser applications, interrupts the "circulus vitiosus" of the origin of the pain and its development (Melzak: muscular tension > pain > increased tension > increased pain, etc.). Results measured according to VAS/VRS/PTM: in acute pain, diminished more than 70%; in chronic pain more than 60%. Clinical effectiveness (success or failure) depends on the correctly applied energy dose--over/underdosage produces opposite, negative effects on cellular metabolism. We did not observe any negative effects on the human body and the use of analgesic drugs could be reduced or completely excluded. LLLT suggests that the laser beam can be used as monotherapy or as a supplementary treatment to other therapeutic procedures for pain treatment.
...
PMID:Low level laser therapy with trigger points technique: a clinical study on 243 patients. 945 32

Pain and discomfort in everyday life are often treated with over-the-counter (OTC) analgesic medications. These drugs are remarkably safe, but serious side effects can occur. Up to 70% of the population in Western countries uses analgesics regularly, primarily for headaches, other specific pains and febrile illness. It is not known whether the patterns of use are consistent with good pain management practices. OTC analgesics are also widely used to treat dysphoric mood states and sleep disturbances, and high levels of OTC analgesic medication use are associated with psychiatric illness, particularly depressive symptoms, and the use of alcohol, nicotine and caffeine. More than 4 g per day of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) or acetaminophen over long periods is considered abuse. People using excessive amounts of OTC analgesics may need more effective treatments for chronic pain, depression or dysthymia. The possibility that these drugs have subtle reinforcing properties needs to be investigated. Certainly phenacetin, which was taken off the market in the 1970s, had intoxicating effects. A better understanding of patterns of use is needed to determine the extent of problem use of OTC analgesics, and whether health could be improved by educating people about the appropriate use of these drugs.
...
PMID:Use and abuse of over-the-counter analgesic agents. 950 57


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