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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors investigated processing of threat words in motor vehicle accident survivors using a modified Stroop procedure. Three samples were included: 28 participants with comorbid
posttraumatic stress disorder
(
PTSD
) and
pain
, 26 participants with
pain
without
PTSD
, and 21 participants without
pain
or any psychiatric conditions. Four word categories were used: (a) accident words, (b)
pain
words, (c) positive words, and (d) neutral words. This study examined whether processing biases would occur to accident words only in participants with
PTSD
or if these biases would also be noted in the No
PTSD
/
Pain
sample. Additionally, this study examined whether processing biases would be noted to
pain
words in the 2
pain
samples, irrespective of
PTSD
. Overall, color naming was significantly slower in the
PTSD
/
Pain
group in comparison with the other groups. As well, the
PTSD
/
Pain
sample showed significant response delays to both accident and
pain
-related words, whereas patients with No
PTSD
/
Pain
showed delays to
pain
stimuli only.
...
PMID:Specificity of Stroop interference in patients with pain and PTSD. 1172 43
Headache is the most common symptom after closed head injury, persisting for more than 2 months in 60% of patients. Rarely does headache occur in isolation. Cervical pain is a frequent accompaniment. Post-traumatic headache is often one of several symptoms of the postconcussive syndrome, and therefore may be accompanied by additional cognitive, behavioral, and somatic problems. Acute post-traumatic headaches may begin at the time of injury and continue for up to 2 months post-injury. Although onset proximate to the time of injury is most common, any new headache type occurring within this period of time is referred to as an acute post-traumatic headache. If such headaches persist beyond the first two months post-injury, they are subsequently referred to as chronic post-traumatic headaches. Over time, post-traumatic headaches may take on a pattern of daily occurrence. If aggressive treatment is initiated early, posttraumatic headache is less likely to become a permanent problem. Once "windup" of post-traumatic headaches occurs, the cycle of ongoing headaches is more difficult to interrupt. The mechanism of post-traumatic headache is poorly understood. Trauma-induced headaches are usually heterogeneous in nature, often including both tension-type
pain
and intermittent migraine-like attacks. Rebound-headaches may develop from overuse of analgesic medications, and the occurrence of such may complicate significantly the diagnosis of post-traumatic headache. Adequate treatment typically requires both "peripheral" and "central" measures. Understanding the general principles of treatment, especially appropriate use of preventive and abortive medications, will most usefully guide treatment. There is scant literature with which to direct treatment selection for post-traumatic headache. Consequently, treatments for post-traumatic headache are based on those prescribed for phenomenologically similar but etiologically distinct headache disorders. Delayed recovery from post-traumatic headache may be a result of inadequately aggressive or ineffective treatment, overuse of analgesic medications resulting in analgesia rebound phenomena, or comorbid psychiatric disorders (eg,
post-traumatic stress disorder
, insomnia, substance abuse, depression, or anxiety).
...
PMID:Post-traumatic Headache. 1173 6
Clinical experience and burn survivor testimony show that the experience of being burned can be associated with catastrophic stress and lead to drastic permanent body image changes from scarring and limb-function loss. Close relatives, if not killed in the fire, often also experience clinically significant bystander stress. Closeness of relationships may be lost, and self-image may suffer. Property damage and loss of crucial resources may be associated with fires. Although many burns result from accidents, most result from preventable causes associated with psychiatric disorders, which include mood disorders, psychoses, cognitive disorders, and substance-use disorders. Burns then result from: Deliberate self-harm Impaired judgment and poor coordination associated with substance intoxication Risk-taking behavior Poor supervision of children and impaired elderly persons Careless handling of flammable materials. Many clinical syndromes, such as delirium, ASD, acute psychosis, suicidality, and
pain
need to be addressed by the consulting psychiatrist to facilitate surgical treatment of the burn injury. Other psychiatric disorders, such as
PTSD
, major depression, and adjustment disorder, need to be treated to expedite long-term adjustment. Hospital length of stay and RTW/RTS are major outcome variables. The psychiatry consultant can positively affect both variables substantially using both pharmacologic and psychosocial measures. The important role of psychiatric issues both before and after burn injury support the need for more consistent and comprehensive medical insurance coverage for psychiatric consultation to burn units and clinics. Burn Support Groups are an invaluable asset.
...
PMID:Psychiatry of the medically ill in the burn unit. 1191 36
Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is a common condition among African Americans. It is associated with severe complications including severe
pain
in the chest, back, abdomen, or extremities. Individuals with SCD also have a reduced life span. Post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a condition increasingly being recognized. In this article we discuss, to our knowledge, the first case of a patient with comorbid sickle cell disease and
post-traumatic stress disorder
.
...
PMID:Sickle cell disease and posttraumatic stress disorder. 1207 19
Pain
is a common and pervasive symptom for persons infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Individuals with persistent
pain
are known to be at heightened risk for
posttraumatic stress disorder
(
PTSD
), an anxiety disorder that manifests itself following exposure to a traumatic event. Moreover, research suggests that patients with persistent
pain
who develop
PTSD
often experience greater
pain
intensity and
pain
-related disability than those who do not develop
PTSD
. The purpose of this study was to assess the relation of
PTSD
to
pain
intensity and
pain
-related interference in HIV-infected persons suffering from persistent
pain
. Study participants included 145 ambulatory persons living with HIV/AIDS (PWHAs) who were enrolled in a randomized clinical trial assessing the impact of a
pain
communication intervention. Participants completed a series of self-report measures including the Stressful Life Events Checklist (SLE), the
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Checklist-Civilian (PCL-C), the Mental Health Inventory (MHI), and the Brief
Pain
Inventory (BPI). On average, participants reported being exposed to 6.3 different types of trauma over the course of their lifetime, of which receiving an HIV diagnosis was rated as being among the most stressful. Over half (53.8%) merited a
PTSD
diagnosis according to the PCL-C. Those with
PTSD
reported having significantly higher
pain
intensity and greater
pain
-related interference in performance of daily activities (i.e., working, sleeping, walking ability and general activity), and affect (i.e., mood, relations with other people, enjoyment of life) over time than those who did not meet the diagnostic criteria. Possible explanations for these findings are discussed along with implications for clinical care.
Pain
2002 Jul
PMID:The impact of PTSD on pain experience in persons with HIV/AIDS. 1209 12
The past century has shown that human beings are capable of genocidal destruction of millions of other humans based on ethnicity or race. Clinicians today are likely to encounter patients who are survivors of inflicted atrocities and abuse. People fleeing horrendous circumstances bring persisting memories that produce symptoms even for the next generation. Families carry the knowledge-personal, cultural, familial, and sometimes individual-of the depths of destruction that human beings can do to one another. Suffering derives from the memory, both physical and mental, of what other persons inflicted; it has multiple dimensions that patients may not express explicitly; instead they may frame their experience of suffering in terms of
pain
. Diagnostic labels such as
post-traumatic stress disorder
or somatization are inadequate to convey human comprehension of suffering. Clinicians around the world need to be willing and able to acknowledge and witness the profound sources of experiential
pain
in the lives of their patients.
...
PMID:Working with suffering. 1222 Jul 44
The clinician manages trauma patients in the emergency room, operation theatre, intensive care unit and trauma ward with an endeavour to provide best possible treatment for physical injuries. At the same time, it is equally important to give adequate attention to behavioural and psychological aspects associated with the event. Knowledge of the predisposing factors and their management helps the clinician to prevent or manage these psychological problems. Various causes of psychological disturbances in trauma patients have been highlighted. These include
pain
, the sudden and unexpected nature of events and the procedures and interventions necessary to resuscitate and stabilise the patient. The ICU and trauma ward environment, sleep and sensory deprivation, impact of injury on CNS, medications and associated pre-morbid conditions are also significant factors. Specific problems that concern the traumatised patients are helplessness, humiliation, threat to body image and mental symptoms. The patients react to these stressors by various defence mechanisms like conservation withdrawal, denial, regression, anger, anxiety and depression. Some of them develop delirium or even more severe problems like acute stress disorder or
post-traumatic stress disorder
. Physical, pharmacological or psychological interventions can be performed to prevent or minimise these problems in trauma patients. These include adequate
pain
relief, prevention of sensory and sleep deprivation, providing familiar surroundings, careful explanations and reassurance to the patient, psychotherapy and pharmacological treatment whenever required.
...
PMID:Psychological care in trauma patients. 1253 72
It is common for individuals with symptoms of
posttraumatic stress disorder
(
PTSD
) to present with co-occurring
pain
problems, and vice versa. However, the relation between these conditions often goes unrecognized in clinical settings. In this paper, we describe potential relations between
PTSD
and chronic pain and their implications for assessment and treatment. To accomplish this, we discuss phenomenological similarities of these conditions, the prevalence of chronic pain in patients with
PTSD
, and the prevalence of
PTSD
in patients with chronic pain. We also present several possible explanations for the co-occurrence of these disorders, based primarily on the notions of shared vulnerability and mutual maintenance. The paper concludes with an overview of future research directions, as well as practical recommendations for assessing and treating patients who present with co-occurring
PTSD
or chronic pain symptoms.
...
PMID:PTSD and the experience of pain: research and clinical implications of shared vulnerability and mutual maintenance models. 1255 28
A majority of patients after intensive care treatment report traumatic memories from their stay in the intensive care unit (ICU). Traumatic memories can be associated with the development of
posttraumatic stress disorder
(
PTSD
) in a subpopulation of these patients. In contrast to other patient populations at risk for
PTSD
, patients in the ICU often receive exogenously administered stress hormones like epinephrine, norepinephrine, or cortisol for medical reasons and are extensively monitored. ICU patients therefore represent a suitable population for studying the relationship between stress hormones, traumatic memories, and the development of
PTSD
. Studies in long-term survivors of ICU treatment demonstrated a clear and vivid recall of different categories of traumatic memory such as nightmares, anxiety, respiratory distress, or
pain
with little or no recall of factual events. The number of categories of traumatic memory recalled increased with the total administered dosages of stress hormones (both catecholamines and cortisol), and the evaluation of these categories at different time points after discharge from the ICU showed better memory consolidation with higher dosages of stress hormones administered. However, the administration of stress doses of cortisol to critically ill patients resulted in more complex findings as it caused a significant reduction in
PTSD
symptoms measured after recovery. This effect can possibly be explained by a differential influence of cortisol on memory. Increased serum cortisol levels not only result in consolidation of emotional memory but are also known to cause a temporary impairment in memory retrieval which appears to be independent of glucocorticoid effects on memory formation. Disrupting retrieval mechanisms with glucocorticoids during critical illness may therefore act protectively against the development of
PTSD
by preventing recall of traumatic memories. Our findings indicate that stress hormones influence the development of
PTSD
through complex and simultaneous interactions on memory formation and retrieval. Our studies also demonstrate that animal models of aversive learning are useful in analyzing and predicting clinical findings in critically ill humans.
...
PMID:Effects of stress hormones on traumatic memory formation and the development of posttraumatic stress disorder in critically ill patients. 1255 38
We choose to discuss from the
PTSD
's point of view because this diagnostic reference is commonly used. We wish outline its restrictive sight which could prevent the professional from having a diagnosis of
PTSD
. We don't want to say there is a
PTSD
everywhere but it appears to us that a traumatic reading can be a precious advantage for the clinician to establish a real therapeutic relation with some patients. Post-traumatic syndrome differs from the majority of other diagnostic categories as it includes in its criteria the presumptive cause of the trauma (criterion A). In the case that this syndrome originates in war experiences, the presumed cause presents itself as an exceptional event overcoming the individual's resources. The notion of war traumatisation has been extended to other events such as catastrophes, physical attacks, rapes, child and wife battering, and sexual abuses. But the events which cause
PTSD
(
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
) are significantly more numerous. It can be seen that medical events such as giving birth, miscarriage, heart attack, cancer, or hospitalisation following resuscitation may give rise to
PTSD
. Further, people experiencing prolonged periods of distress may equally develop a post-traumatic syndrome without any particular event having occurred to surpass their defences. It's the case of the Prolonged Duress Stress Disorder (PDSD). The series of discontinuous stress "waste" the psychic balance and may give rise, at one moment, to posttraumatic symptoms described in DSM, without any specific stressful event. The existence of criterion A is therefore not a necessary prerequisite in establishing a diagnosis of
PTSD
. It is, in fact, very difficult to predict which events could cause a
PTSD
, and this, especially, as the subjective aspects count at least as much as the objective aspects. The clinician should have to carefully explore how the patient experienced the event or, how he apprehended the event itself and it's outcome, if he wants get the traumatic range of a life event. The feeling of deep distress, the feeling of being trapped, the loss of control, the collapse of basic beliefs, the feeling that one's life is in jeopardy, that the physical integrity is (really or in one's imagination) threatened, the feeling of helplessness, are quite as much clues for a possible
PTSD
which hides behind others clinical manifestations either psychological or somatic. Furthermore, the "pure" form described in the DSM and grouping together three further criteria (reliving events, avoiding stimuli associated with the trauma, hyper-reactivity) is extremely rare in the chronic form. An untreated post-traumatic syndrome evolves with time and may present, initially, with very different pathological symptoms giving rise to equally varied diagnoses. Different etiopathogenic models propose to account for the
PTSD
's heterogeneous appearance and instability with time. The comorbidity concept sees the
PTSD
as an independent entity other independent pathologies coexist with. The typologic concept suggests that the
PTSD
is an independent entity which shows different clinical appearances based on symptomatic descriptions. The "cascade" concept suggests to see the
PTSD
as an independent entity which offers, with time, different symptomatic appearances, in evolution, because of events caused by after effects, in different areas of the
PTSD
itself. All of these concepts outline the transnosologic appearance of the
PTSD
which makes it hardly recognizable. The "chronic" syndrome is rarely diagnosed forming a real challenge to prevention. In effect, the present authors insist on the crucial nature of early detection of
PTSD
since the greater the time elapsed the more difficult it becomes due to the evolutionary aspect of the syndrome, which initially has more readily recognizable symptoms. The consequences of an unrecognised
PTSD
are serious and affect both the individual and his immediate family and friends, contributing further to the aggravation of the problems. When a
PTSD
is diagnosed, it can allow the clinician to further a more global care which will help the patient to get a better recovery. With patients who suffered an infarct, the treatment of
PTSD
which prevents their recovery will help to go back to the way they lived before the event. It has been showed how important could be the
PTSD
detection on the severe burned people's
pain
control. Thus it seems to be crucial for the clinician to keep this diagnosis in mind alongside any other.
...
PMID:[Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): the syndrome with multiple faces]. 1264 Mar 23
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