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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Levator ani syndrome is characterized by brief, intermittent
pain
and discomfort in the perirectal or rectal region that can be aggravated by sitting. Physical therapists are beginning to receive referrals for
pain
reduction in this patient population. The purpose of the study was to examine the use of high voltage pulsed galvanic stimulation (HVPGS) for reducing symptoms in patients with levator ani syndrome. A descriptive research design was used. Treatment consisted of one hour of HVPGS at a frequency of 120 Hz and at an intensity to the patient's maximum tolerance applied through a rectal probe. Results on 28 patients indicate that 50% had
pain
or symptom relief, or both, after an average of eight treatments. Those patients who were unresponsive to treatment had a primary diagnosis of
irritable colon
or were postsurgical. We are continuing to examine this treatment and will conduct follow-up examinations on those patients who obtained
pain
relief. Based on these preliminary results, we believe that HVPGS is an effective treatment for selected patients in this population.
...
PMID:Use of high voltage pulsed galvanic stimulation for patients with levator ani syndrome. 331 51
Therapy of
irritable bowel syndrome
is disappointing. Since irritable gut (IG) accounts for 20-40% of all consultations, an investigation was carried out in IG patients treated by relaxation and its effect on the number of consultations, attacks of
pain
, and psychological profile (MMPI) after a period of time. A control group (C) received conventional treatment. The relaxation group (R) was treated simultaneously for a 6-month period. The number of consultations in the C patients was 53 before and 41 after conventional treatment. Consultations in the R group fell from 74 before to 6 after relaxation therapy. Two-monthly attacks of
pain
in the R group fell to zero, while there was no change in the C group on this score. The MMPI changes are original and worth stressing. The improvement immediately, and 40 months, after the relaxation course was significant.
...
PMID:[Anthropo-analytical relaxation in irritable bowel syndrome: results 40 months later]. 331 84
Cimetropium bromide is an antimuscarinic compound with antispasmodic properties. Its effect on meal-stimulated sigmoid motor activity in 30 patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
, mainly with
pain
and constipation, has been evaluated. The mechanical activity of the sigmoid colon was recorded with a probe with three open-tipped tubes ending 45, 30, and 15 cm from the anal margin. After a recording period of 60 min, 5 mg cimetropium bromide or saline was given i.v., according to a randomized, double-blind design 5 min before a 1000 calorie meal, and motility was then recorded for 2 h. The meal caused a significant increase in motor activity for 90 min in the saline-treated group. Cimetropium bromide abolished the peak of motor activity 10-20 min after the meal and significantly inhibited postprandial colonic motility for at least 2 h (p less than 0.01). This effect provides a rationale for the use of cimetropium bromide in treatment of the
irritable bowel syndrome
.
...
PMID:Reduction by cimetropium bromide of the colonic motor response to eating in patients with the irritable bowel syndrome. 336 60
In this multivariate analysis of the
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) we describe the symptomatic and psychologic features of the condition and their possible contributions to health care seeking. We studied 72
IBS
patients, 82 persons with
IBS
who had not sought medical treatment, and 84 normal subjects. All subjects received complete medical evaluation, diary card assessment of abdominal pain and stool habit, and standard psychologic tests of
pain
, personality, mood, stressful life events, illness behavior, and social support.
Pain
and diarrhea were the most important symptoms associated with patient status. When controlling for these symptoms we found that (a)
IBS
patients have a higher proportion of abnormal personality patterns, greater illness behaviors, and lower positive stressful life event scores than
IBS
nonpatients (p less than 0.001) and normals (p less than 0.001); (b)
IBS
nonpatients, although psychologically intermediate between patients and normals, are not different from normals (p less than 0.21); and (c)
IBS
nonpatients have higher coping capabilities, experience illness as less disruptive to life, and tend to exhibit less psychologic denial than patients. These factors may contribute to "wellness behaviors" among people with chronic bowel symptoms. We conclude that the psychologic factors previously attributed to the
IBS
are associated with patient status rather than to the disorder per se. These factors may interact with physiologic disturbances in the bowel to determine how the illness is experienced and acted upon.
...
PMID:Psychosocial factors in the irritable bowel syndrome. A multivariate study of patients and nonpatients with irritable bowel syndrome. 339 17
Fibrositis is a disorder of musculoskeletal
pain
and aching with at least a five to one female-to-male ratio. It is most commonly seen between the ages of 40 and 60, and has a prevalence in the clinic of 6 to 15 percent. Its most common mode of presentation involves generalized musculoskeletal
pain
and aching, but articular
pain
, axial skeletal
pain
, myalgias, and neurovascular complaints sometimes predominate. All patients have multiple areas of local tenderness called "tender points" that are easily identified during physical examination, and are diagnostic. Essential symptoms of fibrositis are disturbed sleep, morning stiffness, and fatigue. Additional rheumatic symptoms include subjective swelling, paresthesias, and numbness. Headaches and
irritable bowel syndrome
are common nonrheumatic complaints. Modest improvement follows treatment by tricyclic agents such as low-dose cyclobenzaprine and amitriptyline, by physical measures, and by reduction in stress. Remission occurs in 20 percent of patients, but is generally short-lived.
...
PMID:The clinical syndrome of fibrositis. 346 12
The aim of this study was to describe the clinical features of patients with chronic unexplained dyspepsia and compare the symptoms with peptic ulcer and biliary
pain
, and determine the prevalence of symptoms that may indicate psychoneurotic traits and measure chronic illness behaviour (days lost from work and doctor visits). Studied were: 113 patients with essential dyspepsia, defined as endoscopically confirmed non-ulcer dyspepsia where gallstones, the
irritable bowel syndrome
and gastro-esophageal reflux have been excluded and there is no ascertainable cause for the dyspepsia; 55 patients with dyspepsia and peptic ulceration at endoscopy; and 53 patients with diagnosed biliary
pain
and cholelithiasis, proven at cholecystectomy. All patients completed a detailed structured history questionnaire in the presence of one investigator. More patients with peptic ulcer than with essential dyspepsia experienced night
pain
,
pain
relieved by food, and vomiting, while more patients with essential dyspepsia than with cholelithiasis experienced epigastric pain, lack of radiation of
pain
, continuous
pain
, mild to moderate
pain
,
pain
before meals,
pain
relieved by food and antacids,
pain
aggravated by food and alcohol, and an absence of vomiting (all p less than 0.01). Symptoms suggesting psychoneurosis, aerophagy symptoms, and chronic illness behaviour were similar in all groups. We conclude that certain symptoms may be of value in diagnosing the underlying cause of dyspepsia.
...
PMID:Comparison of the clinical features and illness behaviour of patients presenting with dyspepsia of unknown cause (essential dyspepsia) and organic disease. 346 12
Patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) often have symptoms from both proximal and distal parts of the gut. Motility disturbances have been reported to occur from the esophagus to the distal colon in
IBS
patients. The patients often have a decreased lower esophageal sphincter pressure and various abnormalities of esophageal peristalsis. Mean transit time in the small intestine after a meal is short in patients with diarrhoea, and long in patients with constipation and
pain
compared with normals.
IBS
patients also show abnormalities of the interdigestive MMC, particularly when exposed to stressful stimuli. Previous studies of the colonic oscillating control potential suggested an increased prevalence of 3/min. slow waves in
IBS
patients compared with normals, but later studies could not confirm this. Long time measurements with multiple electrodes along the colon show a high prevalence of short-lasting segmental contractions in constipated patients, while both short and long-lasting contractions are decreased in painless diarrhoea. Rectal recordings in
IBS
patients have shown an increased contractile response up to 3 hrs after a meal. --The disturbed gut motility in
IBS
patients seems to be due no neural influences rather than strictly myogenic factors.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal motility in patients with the irritable bowel syndrome. 347 13
We randomly assigned 159 patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia, defined as chronic or recurrent epigastric pain without concomitant symptoms of the
irritable bowel syndrome
and with no evidence of organic disease, to treatment for three weeks with an antacid suspension one and three hours after meals, 400 mg of cimetidine twice a day, or placebo, according to a double-blind, double-dummy model. The intensity and duration of epigastric pain were recorded by the patients four times daily during a one-week period without therapy and during the three weeks of treatment. The mean reduction in
pain
intensity after three weeks in the placebo group was 25 percent. Neither antacid nor cimetidine treatment resulted in more than a 4 percent better effect. The reduction of
pain
was statistically significant (P less than 0.01) in all three groups. The time course of the
pain
scores in the groups receiving active drugs followed closely those in the placebo group, and there were no significant differences between the groups at any stage of the treatment. We conclude that the neutralization or suppression of gastric acid is of no clinical value in patients with this syndrome.
...
PMID:Absence of therapeutic benefit from antacids or cimetidine in non-ulcer dyspepsia. 351 76
Nonulcer dyspepsia remains a difficult disorder to treat because it is a heterogeneous syndrome. Once patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
, esophagitis, and other organic diseases are excluded, there remain patients with dyspepsia of unknown cause (termed "essential dyspepsia") and patients with dyspepsia plus symptoms of gastroesophageal reflux without esophagitis. The aim of this study was to determine whether cimetidine or pirenzepine is efficacious in relieving the symptoms of these latter subgroups. Sixty-two consecutive patients were studied who had chronic upper abdominal pain or nausea where endoscopy had shown no evidence of peptic ulceration, esophagitis, or malignancy; 47 had essential dyspepsia, and 15 had dyspepsia plus gastroesophageal reflux. They were initially randomized to either cimetidine or placebo, or pirenzepine or placebo. Patients continued each medication for 1 mo, and, after a washout period, crossed over when again symptomatic; 51 patients completed cimetidine and placebo, and 50 completed pirenzepine and placebo. The results showed that cimetidine was superior to placebo in decreasing the number of upper abdominal pain episodes weekly and the severity of
pain
, but the absolute improvement was small. Pirenzepine was not superior to placebo in decreasing symptoms.
...
PMID:Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial of cimetidine and pirenzepine in nonulcer dyspepsia. 351 48
Forty patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
were randomly allocated to treatment with octylonium bromide (20 mg TID) or cimetropium bromide (50 mg BID) in a double-blind trial lasting for six weeks. Drugs were taken before meals, according to a double-blind schedule. Clinical evaluations were made of digestive and other symptoms, objective findings (
pain
at palpation, contracted colon, tympanites), and overall effectiveness of treatment. Statistically significant decreases in severity of abdominal pain and subjective scores for bowel habits were obtained in both groups. The only statistically significant differences between treatments were in nondigestive symptoms (asthenia, palpitations, tremor, headache, etc.), which improved more in the cimetropium bromide group. No severe side effects were observed in either treatment group.
...
PMID:Double-blind study of a new antimuscarinic, cimetropium bromide, in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. 352 59
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