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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This study was done to characterize changes in patient behavior during specific time periods immediately before first, second, third, and fourth episodes of depression. Forty-three patients from a group of 154 depressed patients examined in an earlier study developed 59 subsequent episodes of depression, and these were the patients used in this study. Suitable age and sex matched controls were also examined for the same time periods. The depressed patients and controls were patients in a rural solo practice. The depressed patients showed increased number of patient initiated visits, increased incidence of hospitalization, increased number of functional complaints, increased number of pain complaints, and increased feelings of tension as compared to controls during the seven months prior to the diagnosis date of the first and each succeeding episode of depression. The study results indicate that increased numbers of office visits, functional complaints, pain complaints, and anxiety complaints can be harbingers of a clinical depression, whether it be the index (first) or a subsequent depressive illness.
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PMID:Depression in family practice: changes in pattern of patient visits and complaints during subsequent developing depressions. 52 63

Relations among physical illness, functional disability, pain, and symptoms of depression were investigated in a sample of community-residing elderly outpatients. As expected, physical illness, functional disability, and pain were correlated with depressive symptomatology. It was further hypothesized that functional disability (but not physical illness per se) would attenuate the relation between depressed affect and pain. The data supported these predictions by showing that functional disability (but not physical illness) accounted for differences in reported pain between nondepressed subjects and those at risk for developing clinical depression. Additional analyses revealed that functional disability mediated relations between pain and depressed affect and also between illness and depressed affect. These results indicate that both pain and illness are important contributors to functional disability, which in turn contributes to symptoms of depression. Secondary analyses revealed that restriction of certain activities associated with physical mobility and independence were strong individual factors in attenuating the relation between pain and depressed affect. An important implication of this research is that neither pain nor activity restriction should be treated in isolation. Maximal effects are likely to be achieved when both are targeted simultaneously.
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PMID:Pain, activity restriction, and symptoms of depression among community-residing elderly adults. 143 Aug 58

Assessment of cases of chronic pelvic pain presents a challenging problem, and many physicians overlook the association of sleep disorders and depression with such pain. We examined these linkages in our chronic pelvic pain clinic, using a questionnaire that assists in diagnosis and management of these cases. To date, the cases of 72 patients (both physician- and self-referred) with pelvic pain have been evaluated. Of these patients, 51 of 71 (72%) reported sleep disorders, and 37 of 72 (51%) had clinical depression, as determined by the Beck Depression Inventory. After adjustment for a sleep-related item on the Beck scale, these two measures showed a positive correlation of .355 (P < .01). The scores of pain patients differed significantly from those of a control group of asymptomatic patients on the depression and sleep disorder measures. By being aware and using a simple questionnaire, the clinician may readily identify overlooked factors, such as sleep disorders and depression, when assessing cases of chronic pelvic pain.
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PMID:Unrecognized association of sleep disorders and depression with chronic pelvic pain. 147 Sep 59

1. Older white men have the highest suicide rate in the nation; a linear increase of suicide occurs with each passing year of chronological age. 2. Elderly who attempt suicide are more likely to communicate their intentions less frequently and to use violent and lethal means. 3. Chronic sleep problems, pain, degenerative illness, or clinical depression may be experienced by older white men at suicidal risk; somatic complaints including imaginary symptoms can mask depression. 4. Educational programs, outreach mental health programs, and enhanced consultation/coordination improve case findings and early intervention. Holistic nursing care, including pain alleviation, depression assessment, and simple comfort measures, are imperative in suicide prevention in the elderly.
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PMID:Suicide among elderly white men: development of a profile. 157 15

The relationship between pain perception and emotional states is well known. However, the nature of this relationship and how different emotional states affect sensory and cognitive dimensions of pain remains uncertain. Results from experimental investigations are often contradictory, which may be due to methodological difficulties in inducing pain and monitoring physiological responses. In addition, most studies have focused on a single emotion, and data on the relative effects of different emotional states are lacking. In the present study we attempted to eliminate some of these methodological problems. Laser evoked potentials were used as a quantitative correlate to pain perception and were measured in 12 highly hypnotically susceptible subjects during seven conditions: (a) a prehypnotic baseline condition; (b) a neutral hypnotic control condition; (c-e) hypnotically recalled anger, fear, and depression in randomized order; (f) a hypnotically recalled happy condition, and (g) a posthypnotic awake control condition. The pain evoked potentials were significantly decreased in the angry condition and significantly increased in the depressed condition compared with baseline. No differences could be detected for either the happy or the fear-related condition compared with the baseline or neutral hypnotic condition. A significant positive correlation between the subjective intensity of depression and the increase in evoked potentials was found, but none for the other three emotions. The results support earlier findings that clinical depression is related to increased pain perception, and findings that the expression of anger can inhibit the experience of pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Clin J Pain 1991 Jun
PMID:The effect of hypnotically induced emotional states on brain potentials evoked by painful argon laser stimulation. 180 50

There is a lack of information about the precise strength of the relationship between chronic pain and depression. In a prior study, women with temporomandibular pain and dysfunction syndrome (TMPDS) had much higher scores than did controls on a measure of nonspecific psychological distress. The question arose as to whether rates of clinical depression are also unusually high in TMPDS patients. Their former treating clinician rates cases for likely lifetime presence or absence of depression. A subset of those rated as likely depressed then had their diagnoses verified independently through a structured clinical interview by a psychiatrist and clinical psychologist. Results revealed a minimum lifetime prevalence rate for major depression of 41%. A rate of this magnitude in TMPDS cases is clearly much higher than would be found for women of similar background in the general population.
Clin J Pain 1991 Sep
PMID:Is major depression comorbid with temporomandibular pain and dysfunction syndrome? A pilot study. 180 30

Electroodontometry was used to examine the pain threshold and sensation threshold in patients with depersonalization, endogenous depression and in mentally healthy test subjects. The strongest differences in the thresholds were found on the anterior teeth. The patients with depersonalization manifested a considerable rise of the sensation threshold and to an ever greater degree of the pain threshold. In patients suffering from endogenous depression, both thresholds were decreased and coincided almost completely. It is likely that this fact is associated with a relatively higher incidence of the painful syndrome in patients suffering from depression.
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PMID:[Study of pain sensitivity based on the indicators of electro- odontometry in patients with depersonalization and depressive disorders]. 196 7

We studied the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) system in Vietnam veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) who also met Research Diagnostic Criteria for endogenous depression (MDD-ED). Over half also abused alcohol, and many complained of pain-confounding factors usually associated with increased HPA activity. Nonetheless, not even one patient had elevated basal plasma cortisol concentrations or an abnormal dexamethasone suppression test (DST); the subjects' post-dexamethasone cortisol values and plasma cortisol per ng plasma dexamethasone were in the low-normal range. These results highlight the biological heterogeneity of endogenous depression and its possible influence by past psychological trauma, and they raise questions about the use of current typological criteria for research purposes.
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PMID:Hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal activity in endogenously depressed post-traumatic stress disorder patients. 281 58

The pattern and frequency of neurovegetative symptoms was studied in 57 patients with chronic pain. Seventy-nine percent of these patients had a diagnosable depressive illness, but endogenous depression was rare (5%). Patients with chronic pain were divided into major depressives, minor/intermittent depressives and patients with no depression. A control group of nonendogenous major depressives without pain was also utilized. Major depressives differed from the other two chronic pain groups in that there was more frequent or severe early waking, weight loss, anorexia, diminished libido and initial insomnia. Diurnal variation of mood was not a characteristic of major depression with chronic pain, and did not differ in frequency from the other two chronic pain groups. Major depressives exhibited a profile of neurovegetative symptoms very similar to that found in the control group of major depressives. Over one-third of minor/intermittent depressed patients with chronic pain exhibited atypical (reversed) vegetative symptoms of hyperphagia and weight gain. This finding, together with our review of the literature, suggests an important and previously unrecognized link between atypical depression and chronic pain.
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PMID:Neurovegetative symptoms in chronic pain and depression. 293 54

Antidepressant drugs are now an important component of the analgesic pharmacopeia. Their ability to relieve pain is independent of the presence of clinical depression, and their efficacy has been documented in the treatment of migraine and tension headaches, neuropathic pain and chronic pain syndromes, including those associated with cancer. The tricyclic antidepressants are safe for use in patients with prolonged pain. The low doses required for analgesia are well tolerated and do not produce the side effects associated with the classic analgesic drugs.
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PMID:Treatment of pain with antidepressants. 298 20


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