Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) is intended for easy measurement of symptoms of depression in elderly patients. The scale initially had 30 items but was reduced to a 15-item scale (GDS-15). This scale was translated into Swedish. However, five items were added: insomnia, anxiety, panic, aches and pain, and hypochondria. A total of 1002 elderly patients were rated by a research nurse using this scale. The results showed that 13.3% of the patients were considered to have affective disorders. The introduction of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors has been of great importance for elderly patients, as these patients have difficulty in tolerating traditional tricyclic antidepressants. In a study of 133 elderly depressed patients, including those with somatic disorders and dementia, citalopram was tested. This drug provided significantly greater improvement than placebo. In another, inter-Nordic study, including 98 patients, citalopram was tested in patients with Alzheimer-type dementia. Depressed mood, and also other emotional disturbances, improved in these patients. Ratings have shown that in victims of Alzheimer-type dementia and vascular dementia, about 80% suffer from emotional disturbances. Drugs that influence both serotonin and noradrenaline metabolism have been introduced recently; these are of great interest in the treatment of elderly people.
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PMID:Recognition and management of depression in the elderly. 947 38

To determine whether reliable and valid rankings of pain and discomfort resulting from hospital procedures encountered by advanced dementia patients could be developed from interviews with cognitively intact adults, rankings of pain and discomfort resulting from 16 common procedures were obtained from two samples of hospitalized, nondemented adults using ten- (N = 100) and five- (N = 35) point numeric rating scales (NRS). Reliability was assessed by having 30 additional subjects complete ten-point NRS representing the ten most frequent procedures in a re-arranged order. By repeated measure analysis of variance, the scales discriminated between procedures (F = 35.1, P < 0.001). Subjects could discriminate between pain and discomfort (F = 21.6, P < 0.001). The five-point NRS exhibited better subject discrimination between experiences. Reliability was also acceptable. A five-point NRS produced reliable and valid pain and discomfort rankings for 16 common hospital procedures and experiences. These rankings should prove useful in reducing suffering and can serve as surrogates for quantifying pain and discomfort in dementia patients.
J Pain Symptom Manage 1998 Feb
PMID:Pain and discomfort associated with common hospital procedures and experiences. 949 7

The elderly are predisposed to injuries due to consequences of ageing and presence of disease process commonly seen in the old people. Age-related deterioration of senses such as decrease in hearing capacity, presbyopia, changes in co-ordination, balance, motor strength and postural stability render the elderly vulnerable to environmental hazards. Diseases such as dementia, congestive cardiac failure, postural hypotension, osteoporosis and arthritis further contribute to compound problems of the elderly. Age and chronic factors further blunt the reserves to enable an elderly individual meet the demands of trauma. The challenge to the clinician is to be aware of the subtle changes and deviation from the norm that may suggest development of complications. With careful attention and appropriate physiological support the elderly patient has a good chance of survival. The primary condition must be assessed, necrotic tissues must be debrided by thorough surgical toileting, pus must be drained, wounds sutured and fractures must be set while cardiopulmonary activity must be monitored accurately. The patient should be re-assured, kept warm and adequate analgesia given to relieve pain. Intravascular volume and composition of extracellular fluid must be maintained. Nutritional support should be provided in amounts needed to meet the higher demands of trauma and preferably by oral feeding. Above all multidisciplinary approach to the traumatised elderly is mandatory involving surgeons, physicians, physiotherapists and other paramedical staff and relatives.
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PMID:An overview on management of the traumatised elderly patient. 952 40

Dementia's impact on pain sensation is not well understood. Very little research has been done in this area, our clinical knowledge is poor, and there is no published information available to practitioners. This article reviews the current literature and discusses the need for further research. The number of patients with dementia is growing. This patient group will require dental diagnosis and treatment, and cannot be ignored by dentists. A humane approach to treatment must be adopted.
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PMID:Dementia's impact on pain sensation: a serious clinical dilemma for dental geriatric care givers. 955 12

This project aimed to determine overall psychosocial health (measured using the psychosocial dimension of the Functional Limitations Profile) and factors which influence this in a group of carers of those with dementia and to compare their psychosocial health with that of older people attending general practitioners (GPs); arthritis support groups and a pain clinic (out-patients) and a group of community dwellers undergoing renal dialysis. The carer group showed a significant decrease in recreation and pastimes and social interactions compared to older GP attenders. The carers showed similar restrictions in social interactions and recreation to those with chronic arthritis, but the latter were more impaired in the domains of emotional behaviour and sleep and rest. The older people attending a pain clinic did not differ in the areas of alertness and social interactions compared to the carer group. The dialysis group demonstrated the greatest dysfunction overall. These results suggest that the psychosocial health of carers of those with dementia is impaired, the profile of which differs from those suffering with chronic diseases. Social and recreation activities appear most affected in the carers. Commensurate with studies exploring the health status of those suffering from diseases, the measurement of the psychosocial health status of carers should also be considered in the scope of assessment and intervention.
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PMID:The psychosocial health status of carers of persons with dementia: a comparison with the chronically ill. 961 Feb 18

We present updated information on a previously reported kindred with an autosomal dominant disorder variably expressed as indifference to pain, dementia, and ataxia. Additional clinical and radiological information is presented, as are autopsy results form the index case. In addition to evidence of Alzheimer's disease, the autopsy revealed bilateral thalamic gliosis, which may be a neuroanatomic substrate for the indifference to pain seen in this patient. To our knowledge, this is the first reported association of thalamic gliosis and indifference to pain.
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PMID:A unique autosomal dominant disorder with indifference to pain: clinicopathologic correlation of indifference to pain and thalamic gliosis. 974 71

Studies suggest that high dose NSAID use may be associated with a reversible impairment of cognition in the elderly. Prolonged NSAID use, on the other hand, may prevent the decline in cognition associated with aging. However, it has yet to be to be definitively determined whether this protection arises from an anti-inflammatory effect that modifies pathways involved in Alzheimer's dementia, or is mediated by a platelet effect that decreases the risk of cerebrovascular disease. Further large-scale, randomised, controlled trials using NSAIDs are needed before patients can be advised that the known risks of NSAIDs are outweighed by their potential long term benefits on cognition. While clinicians await the results of such studies, they should continue to be alert to the possibility of acute CNS adverse effects in their elderly patients who are receiving NSAIDs and to prescribe the minimum dose that is necessary to control pain and inflammation.
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PMID:Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and cognitive function: do they have a beneficial or deleterious effect? 988 87

Neuropsychiatric diseases viewed as multifaceted expression of a dysfunctional brain in which atypical responses are evoked by various sensory inputs. Disease entities have traditionally been classified according to the predominant manifestation ( ) without regard to the overlapping features of many of the diseases (+/-). Thus, mild to moderate pain, mood, cognitive, and neurosomatic symptoms are frequently present in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) patients. Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is listed as an example of a predominantly chronic pain syndrome. Affect (mood) disorders include depression (Depress.), anxiety, panic reactions, blunted affect, mania, etc. Schizophrenia (Schizo.) is listed as an example of a major cognitive psychosis. Autism as well as various forms of dementia would be included in this category. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is an example of a neurosomatic disease.
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PMID:Stealth viruses as neuropathogens. 1015 Jan 89

The work was done to facilitate the clinical diagnosis and understanding of Rett syndrome (RS) by grouping the symptoms and signs in areas of neurological disfunction. This is a retrospective, longitudinal and observational study of 30 young females whose clinical manifestations were grouped using a modified Fitzgerald et al. scale for motor and behavior evaluation of patients with RS. All patients were videotaped at least during one or several appointments during their follow-up for a period of 1 to 10 years. All patients and videotapes were reviewed independently by the three authors. We followed the clinical diagnostic criteria of classic RS, and grouped the symptoms and signs in 12 groups of clinical phenomenology that represented specific areas of central or peripheral nervous system involvement: 1) dementia syndrome (fronto-temporo-parietal and limbic dysfunction); 2) extrapyramidal syndrome (basal ganglia dysfunction); 3) respiratory function disorders (brain stem reticular system disfunction); 4) sleep disorders (reticular system and limbic dysfunction); 5) epilepsy (cortico-subcortical paroxysmal bioelectrical dysfunction); 6) lower motor neuron syndrome (neuropathic dysfunction and/or peripheral neuropathy); 7) body growth retardation; 8) tonic-postural skeletal deformities; 9) deficit of pain sensation (nociceptive deficit); 10) pseudobulbar dysfunction; 11) autonomic dysfunction and 12) others (microcephaly and bruxism). In clinical practice, we recommend the use of this grouping of symptoms and signs because it makes facilities the clinical study, definition of areas of dysfunction and diagnosis of the patient with RS.
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PMID:[The clinical phenomenology of Rett's syndrome]. 1020 8

Aspirin was first synthesised 100 years ago and its preparation and marketing is generally reckoned to have been the foundation of the pharmaceutical industry. For most of the time since then it has been used for the relief of pain and fever. The modern phase of aspirin use commenced with the reporting in 1974 of a randomised controlled trial in the secondary prevention of death by low-dose aspirin given to patients who had suffered a myocardial infarct. Reports of other trials followed and an overview of the first six trials was presented to the inaugural meeting of the Society for Clinical Trials in Philadelphia in 1980. There have been two further major overviews and the most recent, based on 145 trials, established that low-dose aspirin reduces vascular events by around one third. It has been estimated that, used appropriately, aspirin could prevent 100,000 premature deaths each year worldwide, at a cost of about 250 Pounds ($400) per life saved, and about 80 Pounds ($130) per cardiovascular event prevented. The evidence indicates that it is seriously underused at present. The aspirin story continues and trials are in progress to test other possible uses of aspirin, in vascular dementia, colorectal cancer, and cataract.
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PMID:Platelets, aspirin, and cardiovascular disease. 1021 50


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