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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The usefulness of the
Somatization
factor of the MMPI-168 with low back pain patients was examined in two separate studies. In study 1, 58 male veteran low back pain patients who had been divided into organic and mixed groups served as Ss. MMPI protocols were rescored for the five factors of Overall, Hunter, and Butcher (1973). The organic and mixed groups differed only on the
Somatization
factor. A cutting score of raw greater than or equal to 8 (T = 75) was determined to classify the sample correctly 74.5% of the time. In study 2, a second sample of 48 male veteran low back pain patients was divided into mixed, organic, and functional groups. The mixed group was subdivided further into a mixed-
pain
group who still were having
pain
and were seeking treatment and a mixed-relief group who were experiencing a reduction of
pain
and were returning to vocational activities. The functional and mixed-
pain
groups differed from the organic and mixed-relief groups on the
Somatization
and Depression factors. The cutting score determined in the study 1 correctly classified patients 83% of the time.
...
PMID:Application of the somatization factor of the MMPI-168 with low back pain patients. 14 41
This study examined whether pretreatment psychological characteristics of temporomandibular disorder (TMD) patients were related to the response to treatment in a TMD and facial pain clinic. The care provided to patients was either an evaluation only or an evaluation followed by a course of physical medicine/dental procedures (occlusal appliances, physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medications). Outcomes were assessed in terms of
pain
levels, jaw function difficulties, and satisfaction with care at 6 months posttreatment by phone and 16 months posttreatment by mail. There were no pretreatment differences between treated and evaluated patients except for higher pretreatment jaw function difficulty scores in the evaluated only patients. Factor analysis of pretreatment scores revealed distrust,
pain
, anxiety, and somatization.
Somatization
predicted follow-up
pain
levels at both follow-ups in the treated patients but only at the 16-month follow-up in the evaluated only patients. Pretreatment
pain
levels predicted posttreatment
pain
in both groups only at the 6-month follow-up. Posttreatment jaw function difficulties were related inconsistently to the pretreatment dimensions, while satisfaction was not predicted by pretreatment scores except for a possible connection between this outcome and distrust. It is concluded that an overconcern about bodily functioning appears to decrease the likelihood that patients obtain
pain
relief from physical medicine care.
...
PMID:Predicting response to treatment for temporomandibular disorders. 140 Nov 33
In comparison with older adults living in the community, elders who are institutionalized are older, sicker, and more likely to have no living family members, factors that place them at risk for suicide.
Somatization
, or physical suffering, is a frequently overlooked symptom of elderly depression, perhaps because it is falsely assumed that such symptoms expressed by the older adult are normal concomitants of aging. Strengthening and extending existing family roles in supporting the elder who is suicidal and depressed is vital to reducing loneliness, emotional
pain
, loss of independence, and to increasing self-concept. An expanded knowledge of mental health needs of older adults and their families is critical in suicide prevention. A major step toward prevention is the recognition of depressive symptomatology and key elements and clues to suicide in the institutionalized elderly.
...
PMID:The suicidal patient in long-term care institutions. 230 71
Demographic, clinical and psychological characteristics of 92 patients with low back pain were correlated with prolactin and cortisol levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).
Somatization
and depression scores correlated statistically significantly with the CSF serum ratio of prolactin both in men and in the total group. An increased CSF/serum ratio of cortisol was slightly associated with somatization scores in the total group. Multiple stepwise regression, furthermore, revealed that somatization, anxiety and one of the
pain
indices contributed to the variance in the CSF prolactin level, which was mostly dependent on the respective serum level. Sex and electromyographic findings (EMG) accounted for 12 and 7%, respectively, of the variance in the afternoon cortisol levels. Women reported more somatization and depression feelings than did men. Most of the data support our earlier assumption that male and female
pain
patients have different coping mechanisms. In spite of the common underlying endocrine responses to distress in men and women, gender differences in psychological response appear to modify endocrine responses to the experience of low back pain.
Pain
1985 Nov
PMID:Prolactin and cortisol responses to the experience of low back pain. 293 25
Somatization
implies a tendency to experience and communicate psychological distress in the form of somatic symptoms and to seek medical help for them. So defined, it is neither a disorder nor a diagnostic category but a generic term for a set of experimental, cognitive, and behavioral characteristics of patients who complain of physical symptoms in the absence of relevant medical findings. Such patients are ubiquitous in all medical care settings, pose difficult diagnostic and management problems, and overutilize health care thus contributing to its cost.
Somatization
may be transient or persistent, and may or may not be associated with a diagnosable medical or psychiatric disorder. The most common concurrence of somatization is with affective and anxiety disorders, and, to a lesser degree, the somatoform disorders. Persistent somatization poses a serious clinical, social, and economic problem and hence early identification of potential chronic somatizers should be attempted to avoid its development.
Pain
, fatigue, dizziness, and dyspnea are the commonest symptoms. Etiology of somatization is multifactorial and so should be its management.
...
PMID:Somatization: the experience and communication of psychological distress as somatic symptoms. 333 84
Standard psychological tests generally provide a single global score that reflects multidimensional constructs, such as depression and anxiety. This single score, however, integrates a range of item contents, including cognitive/affective, somatic, and behavioral characteristics of these multidimensional constructs. The present study was designed to compare the pattern of item endorsement among chronic pain patients (N = 50), psychiatric inpatients (N = 50), and hospital employees (N = 50) on the SCL-90-R (Derogatis, Rickels, & Rock, 1976).
Pain
patients reported the highest SCL-90 scale level of
Somatization
, while the psychiatric inpatients reported the highest level of Anxiety and Depression. Additionally, the within-scale pattern of item responses on the Anxiety and Depression scales differed among groups. Although psychiatric inpatients endorsed equivalent levels of somatic and cognitive items, the
pain
patients' reports of psychological distress were limited primarily to somatic signs of anxiety and depression. Thus, the interpretation of
pain
patients' psychological profiles and subsequent treatment recommendations may be inappropriate if based on normative data obtained from psychiatric and/or normal populations.
...
PMID:Cognitive and somatic item response pattern of pain patients, psychiatric patients, and hospital employees. 380 98
We investigated the relationship between somatic and psychological symptoms and
pain
reported during a clinical examination for 220 patients with chronic temporomandibular disorder (TMD)
pain
. The clinical examination involved palpation of the muscles of the face and neck, as well as intraoral sites and non-TMD-related placebo sites. A distinction was drawn between somatization--the tendency to report numerous somatic symptoms--and psychological distress manifested by report of numerous affective and cognitive symptoms.
Somatization
was assessed with the
Somatization
scale of the SCL-90-R; cognitive/affective distress was assessed with the non-somatic items of the Anxiety and Depression scales. Heightened somatization and high-intensity
pain
were strong predictors of widely dispersed muscle palpation
pain
during the clinical examination. High-somatization patients were 3 times more likely than low-somatization subjects to report having a painful placebo site.
Pain
dispersion was more closely linked to report of number of somatic symptoms than to report of affective and cognitive symptoms of psychological distress.
Pain
1994 Apr
PMID:Somatization and pain dispersion in chronic temporomandibular disorder pain. 806 97
A series of patients with chronic low back pain evaluated at a tertiary referral center were the subjects for this study. Of 250 consecutive patients, 94 were diagnosed as having myofascial
pain
and 57 as having herniated disc syndrome. Before evaluation and diagnosis, all patients completed the McGill
Pain
Questionnaire, ratings of
pain
and disability, and the Symptom Checklist 90-R. Patients were also grouped on the basis of previous surgical history and workers' compensation benefits. Patients suffering from myofascial
pain
were significantly less likely to report periods of
pain
relief than patients with herniated disc syndrome. Those receiving workers' compensation benefits reported significantly greater levels of
pain
, disability, and psychological distress than those not receiving benefits, irrespective of diagnosis. Patients who underwent previous surgery did not differ significantly from those who never underwent surgery. All patients had elevated scores on the
Somatization
subscale of the Symptom Checklist 90-R. Patients with myofascial
pain
and workers' compensation benefits demonstrated the highest levels of somatization and phobia. These findings suggest that the effects of low back pain of myofascial origin have comparable, if not worse, consequences than disc herniation. These findings also reaffirm the importance of workers' compensation in understanding the differences in patients with chronic low back pain.
...
PMID:Pain, disability, and psychological functioning in chronic low back pain subgroups: myofascial versus herniated disc syndrome. 841 67
To identify predictors of back-related long-term functional limitations, 1213 adult enrollees of a Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) in Washington state were interviewed about a month after a consultation for back pain in a primary care setting in 1989-1990, and followed each year thereafter. Out of 100 factors documented at the one-month assessment, measures of somatization, depression, functional limitations, and
pain
were the strongest predictors of two-year modified Roland-Morris score among a random subsample of 569 subjects. A multiple regression model containing the Symptom Checklist Depression and
Somatization
scores, the one-month modified Roland-Morris score and the number of
pain
days in the past six months explained about 30% of the variance in the outcome. Using recursive partitioning, a very simple model was developed to identify patients at high risk of sustaining long-term significant functional limitations. The regression model and the recursive partitioning model were successfully tested in a fresh sample of patients (n = 644). Clinical application of the recursive partitioning model and methodological aspects of this study are discussed.
...
PMID:Predicting long-term functional limitations among back pain patients in primary care settings. 904 88
Patients with chronic non-malignant
pain
are often suspected of reporting medical symptoms that have non-organic as opposed to purely organic origins. According to the somatization hypothesis, non-organic reporting occurs when affective or other benign physical sensations are misconstrued as symptoms of physical disease [corrected]. Psychological tests purporting to assess somatization are limited by their self-report format and may be confounded in patients with physical disease or injury. Measures of somatization may also be influenced or biased by underlying differences in depression or anxiety. In order to obtain an unbiased estimate of somatization, therefore, it is necessary to control for the influence of extraneous variables. In the present study, symptom report scales designed to assess somatization, symptom amplification, and disease conviction were administered to a group of 100 patients with chronic non-malignant
pain
. The strategy was to determine whether any of these tests could account for individual differences in illness behavior. Specifically, the set of dependent measures included: length of disability; frequency of medical visitation; activity level; and level of domestic functioning. The most successful predictor of patient behavior was the
Somatization
Scale (Derogatis et al. 1974) which correlated positively and significantly with each dependent measure. In order to examine the possibility that scores on this test were biased by differences in organic pathology, three physician
pain
specialists were asked to rate the morbidity of each item on the scale. A multiple regression analysis was then performed to examine whether differences in symptom morbidity, depression, or anxiety could account for the correlation between symptom ratings and illness behavior. The analysis showed that while depression and anxiety were significantly correlated with measures of illness behavior, the
Somatization
Scale still accounted for a significant amount of unique variance in three out of five dependent variables. Symptom morbidity was significantly correlated with only one measure of illness behavior (Activity Level). In view of these findings, scores on the
Somatization
Scale were used to classify 25 patients as Symptom Minimizers and another 25 as Symptom Amplifiers. When compared to Minimizers, Amplifiers were disabled for a significantly greater number of days, reported significantly more impairment in domestic functioning, were significantly less active, visited the doctor significantly more often, and were significantly more distressed. The results suggest that substantial differences in disability and medical visitation may exist among patients who may not differ appreciably in their level of organic pathology. Instead, differences in illness behavior may, to some extent, be mediated by differences in somatization.
Pain
1996 Dec
PMID:Non-organic symptom reporting in patients with chronic non-malignant pain. 927 16
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