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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of cryptococcal granulomatous arachnitis of the spinal cord was reported. A 12-year-old boy suffered from sudden occipitalgia and left hemiparesis. The symptoms disappeared spontaneously in about a half year. The next year, he consulted an orthopedist because of lumbago and gait disturbance. Myelography through the cisternal route showed complete block at the level of L1. Exploratory laminectomy of D12 and L1 revealed adhesive arachnitis. Symptoms were improved immediately after the operation. At the age of 15, he was admitted to our clinic, because of sudden onset of
headache
and vomiting. Computed tomography showed marked hydrocephalus. He recovered by ventriculoperitoneal shunt, and was discharged. The next year, sudden
back pain
occurred. Gait disturbance, sensory disturbance of the legs and trunks below the mamilla, and dysuria appeared gradually. He was readmitted and laminectomy of D2-4 was performed. The arachnoid membrane was white and 2 mm in thickness diffusely. Thickened arachnoid membrane was removed at the level of D2-4. Histological diagnosis was granulomatous arachnitis. Cryptococcus was seen in the removed tissue. Symptoms were improved after operation. One thousand milligrams of amphoterisin B was injected intermittently. He was discharged on food. Spinal symptoms in cryptococcosis are rare. Operative procedures were effective before the administration of amphoterisin B.
...
PMID:[Cryptococcal granulomatous arachnitis of the spinal cord--a case report (author's transl)]. 49 61
Ketoprofen and indomethacin were compared as specific therapies for primary dysmenorrhea in this study involving 23 primary dysmenorrheic women; the study was double-blind and cross-over. Each patient was given a code-numbered package of capsules of ketoprofen (50 mg) or indomethacin (25 mg); medication (1 capsule 3 times daily) was started 1 day before menstruation and was continued until cessation of dysmenorrheic symptoms (no longer than 4 days). Patient estimation of the effect of ketoprofen was ranked as good in 70% of cases, moderate in 18%, and nil in 12%. For indomethacin, the figures were 58, 31, and 10%, respectively. Initial dysmenorrhea score of 9.6 was reduced to 3.6 during ketoprofen therapy and to 4 with indomethacin (P.001). Ketoprofen alleviated pelvic pain in 84% of cases; indomethacin in 78%. Mean duration of pelvic pain was reduced to 5.1 hours from an initial period of 10.6 hours with ketoprofen and 5 hours with indomethacin (P.01); this statistic excluded cycles of total relief. Other symptoms relieved were similar with both drugs, including: lower
back pain
, vomiting, diarrhea, and dizziness (alleviated in 82-97%) and
headache
, fatigue, and nervousness (alleviated in 40-67%). Blood loss was subjectively estimated to decrease in 42% and increase in 4% of ketoprofen-treated patients, whereas for indomethacin these figures were 36% and 7%, respectively. All side effects were mild. The rate of lost working days was significantly decreased under both treatments.
...
PMID:The refief of primary dysmenorrhea by ketoprofen and indomethacin. 53 Dec 31
Thirty-two patients with the onset of erythema chronicum migrans, Lyme arthritis, or both in mid-1976 were studied prospectively. The skin lesion (24 patients) typically lasted about 3 weeks, beginning as a red macule or papule that expanded to form a large ring with central clearing. Associated symptoms ranged from none to malaise, fatigue, chills and fever,
headache
, stiff neck,
backache
, myalgias, nausea, vomiting, and sore throat. Three patients had been bitten by ticks at the site of the initial lesion 4 to 20 days before its onset. Nineteen patients suddenly developed a monoarticular or oligoarticular arthritis 4 days to 22 weeks (median, 4 weeks) after onset of the skin lesion; eight developed arthritis without a preceding skin lesion. Seven of these 27 experienced migratory joint pains. Arthritis attacks, most commonly in the knee, were typically short (median, 8 days) but sometimes persisted for months. Other manifestations included neurologic abnormalties, myocardial conduction abnormalities, serum cryoprecipitates, elevated serum IgM levels, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rates. The diagnostic marker is the skin lesion; without it, geographic clustering is the most important clue.
...
PMID:Erythema chronicum migrans and Lyme arthritis. The enlarging clinical spectrum. 86 48
The student population at Edinburgh University was surveyed in 1974 to collect data on women's menstrual cycles and to examine sources of individual differences in reporting symptoms associated with the cycle. 2542 non-oral contraceptive (OC) users and 756 OC users provided data. Both sets of respondents were questioned about the occurrence, both premenstrually and during menstruation, of 9 symptoms. The "physical" symptoms (stomachache,
backache
, nausea, fainting) were more often reported during menstruation, whereas the so-called "emotional" symptoms (lethargy, irritability, depression, tension,
headache
) had a greater prevalence premenstrually. When the 9 menstrual symptoms were broken down by students' fields of concentration, arts students were found to report more "emotional" symptoms than those in the sciences and professions (medicine and law). Further analysis showed that only and 1st born children were slightly less likely to report symptoms than those whose nearest sibling is 7 or more years older or younger or later born children. A similar trend was found for the reporting of illness in an earlier analysis of data from this sample. When cycle length and reqularity were analyzed together, women with long and regular cycles were found to have the lowest proportion reporting symptoms during menstruating with the exception of tension, nausea, and fainting, and women with short and irregular cycles had a correspondingly high incidence of all symptoms. In addition, women with more regular cycles were more likely to report infrequent recall of dreams than those with irregular cycles. Overall, the women who are most likely to report menstrual symptoms, especially those of an "emotional" character, are more likely to report other illnesses with emotional connotations, recall their dreams more frequently, show a preference for the arts, and tend to have been brought up with older siblings. This cluster of personality attributes defines an "expressive" personaltiy in contrast to the more "controlled" style of women at the other extreme.
...
PMID:Variations in menstrual cycle symptom reporting. 98 37
Quinine was compared with a 9-phenanthrene methanol (WR33063) and a 4-quinoline methanol (WR30090) for the treatment of 207 patients with falciparum malaria in Southeast Thailand. Quinine eradicated parasitaemia (average 70 hours) more rapidly than either WR30090 (72 hours) or WR33063 (77 hours). But WR33063 had a higher cure rate (92%) than WR30090 (86%) or quinine (85%). The mean duration of fever and of parasitaemia were combined with the failure rate to form an arbitrary efficacy index. Using this concept WR33063 was the most effective drug. The recrudescence rate correlated with the degree and duration of parasitaemia and with the duration of fever. WR33063 was the least toxic drug. Side effects associated with WR30090 appeared to be
headache
,
backache
and urticaria. Quinine was the most toxic drug. All 3 drugs were inconvenient in having to be administered every 8 hours for 6 days. One patient did not respond to oral quinine but did respond to an intravenous quinine infusion (IVQ). A "Medication Ward Round" was perfected during the study and comprised sequential history, drug administration, physical examination, dose notation and patient observation. Falciparum nephrosis was diagnosed in one patient.
...
PMID:Comparison of a 9-phenanthrene methanol (WR33063), a 4-quinoline methanol (WR30090), and quinine for falciparum malaria in Thailand. 110 64
Prolonged ingestion of mixed analgesics containing phenacetin has been associated significantly with the development of a chronic interstitial nephritis frequently associated with papillary necrosis. This disease is frequently underdiagnosed. If an adequate history of
headache
and/or
backache
(of which most of these patients complain) is not taken, the central causative effect of phenacetin ingestion may never be appreciated. Laboratory tests show the usual abnormalities seen in any form of chronic interstitial nephritis such as poor urinary concentration, renal failure with large urine output, and no hypertension. Papillary necrosis is helpful but not pathognomonic. The type of medications ingested appears to be changing to prescription compounds. The with significant improvement in renal function.
...
PMID:Phenacetin nephritis. 114 22
An 82-year-old woman without previous medical problem noticed vague
back pain
on December 31, 1989, and was admitted to a hospital because she developed a fever, a rapidly progressive weakness followed by anesthesia of the lower extremities and sphincter disturbance. On myelography and myelo-CT, the spinal cord appeared to be displaced by an extramedullary mass which partially blocked the subdural space at the level of T-9 to L-1. When transferred to our hospital on January 8, 1990, she was febrile and complaining of
headache
with meningeal signs. Percussion tenderness was present at T-8 to L-1 spinal spinous process. Neurological examination revealed that the patient had mild consciousness clouding, total paraplegia in the legs, sensory disturbance of a partial degree at L-1 to L-3 and totally below L-3, brisk but equal tendon reflexes in the upper extremities, areflexia in the legs with positive bilateral Babinski signs and sphincter disturbance. Otherwise she was neurologically unremarkable. Acute inflammatory reactions were prominent among the laboratory findings on admission. A lumbar tap yielded purulent fluid with more than 170,000 cells/mm3, 5,000 mg/dl of protein, 44 mg/dl of glucose and culture of the fluid isolated Escherichia coli. T1-weighted sagittal MRI disclosed an ill defined mass which showed the same or locally higher with gadopentetate dimeglumine (Gd-DTPA) signal intensity as soft tissue, compressing the spinal cord anteriorly from T-7 to L-3. The lesion was noticed to have a more extensive rostral-caudal extent than was inferred from myelography and myelo-CT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of spinal subdural abscess in the aged--comparative study with neuroradiological findings]. 135 3
A patient underwent outpatient knee arthroscopy with spinal anesthesia administered at the patient's request. The patient was discharged after a 3-hour recovery period. Three days later, the patient returned because of a
headache
that had begun the evening after surgery and progressively worsened. Treatment with caffeine and hydration for presumed postdural puncture
headache
resulted in relief for approximately 1 hour. An epidural blood patch was then performed and relieved symptoms for 3 hours until
backache
began and worsened over the next 7 hours. Computed axial tomography showed epidural air. After symptomatic treatment and observation overnight, the patient was released, and follow-up by telephone was planned. For 2 days, symptoms persisted. Therapy with aspirin 600 mg 4 times daily resulted in acute and significant relief. The
backache
resolved after 1 week. A review of the literature on
backache
following epidural blood patch is presented.
...
PMID:Low back pain following epidural blood patch. 138 99
This research develops and evaluates a simple method of grading the severity of chronic pain for use in general population surveys and studies of primary care pain patients. Measures of pain intensity, disability, persistence and recency of onset were tested for their ability to grade chronic pain severity in a longitudinal study of primary care
back pain
(n = 1213),
headache
(n = 779) and temporomandibular disorder pain (n = 397) patients. A Guttman scale analysis showed that pain intensity and disability measures formed a reliable hierarchical scale. Pain intensity measures appeared to scale the lower range of global severity while disability measures appeared to scale the upper range of global severity. Recency of onset and days in pain in the prior 6 months did not scale with pain intensity or disability. Using simple scoring rules, pain severity was graded into 4 hierarchical classes: Grade I, low disability--low intensity; Grade II, low disability--high intensity; Grade III, high disability--moderately limiting; and Grade IV, high disability--severely limiting. For each pain site, Chronic Pain Grade measured at baseline showed a highly statistically significant and monotonically increasing relationship with unemployment rate, pain-related functional limitations, depression, fair to poor self-rated health, frequent use of opioid analgesics, and frequent pain-related doctor visits both at baseline and at 1-year follow-up. Days in Pain was related to these variables, but not as strongly as Chronic Pain Grade. Recent onset cases (first onset within the prior 3 months) did not show differences in psychological and behavioral dysfunction when compared to persons with less recent onset. Using longitudinal data from a population-based study (n = 803), Chronic Pain Grade at baseline predicted the presence of pain in the prior 2 weeks. Chronic Pain Grade and pain-related functional limitations at 3-year follow-up. Grading chronic pain as a function of pain intensity and pain-related disability may be useful when a brief ordinal measure of global pain severity is required. Pain persistence, measured by days in pain in a fixed time period, provides useful additional information.
...
PMID:Grading the severity of chronic pain. 140 9
Based on obligatory notifications from pharmacies to the National Board of Health about prescription of strong analgesics as well as questionnaires to the prescribing doctors, the occurrence and causes of pain requiring strong analgesics outside hospitals were analysed over a period of one month in Denmark in a limited population (480,000), corresponding to nearly 10% of the Danish population. During one month, strong analgesics were prescribed to 0.2 per cent of the population. The commonest acute conditions were
back pain
(23%) and trauma (17%). The commonest recurrent acute conditions were
headache
(25%) and angina pectoris (17%). The commonest chronic non-malignant conditions were
back pain
(29%) and pancreatitis (7%). The commonest malignant conditions were lung cancer (20%) and colorectal cancer (14%). The commonest conditions indicated under the chronic pain syndrome were
headache
(33%) and
back pain
(13%). Conditions requiring strong analgesics reflect to some extent the distribution of painful conditions in the general population.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of pain requiring strong analgesics outside hospital in a geographically defined population in Denmark. 142 20
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