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

A tight but painless soft-tissue swelling in the left parasternal region, with chronic cough and lumbo-ischial pain becoming progressively more severe over several months, occurred in a 27-year-old man. The chest X-ray film was normal, radiography of the iliosacral joints revealed right-sided sacroiliitis. In the further course of the illness night sweat, nightly fever up to 38 degrees C and weight loss of 7 kg in two months, as well as severe treatment-resistant earache developed. When hospitalized, another chest X-ray film showed disseminated small nodular foci pointing to tuberculosis. Sputum and irrigation fluid from the right middle-ear contained Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Biopsy material from the parasternal tumour and middle-ear mucosa contained caseous granulomas, confirming the diagnosis of tuberculous sacroiliitis as part of multi-organ tuberculosis. Tuberculostatic treatment--400 mg isoniazid, 600 mg rifampicin, and 1,500 mg pyrazinamide daily (the latter discontinued after 8 weeks)--normalized the appearance in the chest X-ray film. The patient returned to his home in Holland and, four years later, reported that he was free of any symptoms, even during sport activity.
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PMID:[Unilateral sacroiliitis in multiorgan tuberculosis]. 198 8

Patients presenting to the otolaryngologist with complaints such as otalgia, dizziness, tinnitus, or fullness in the ear may be experiencing the effects of craniomandibular disorders. These disorders can involve dysfunction in the delicate interrelationship of the skull, mandible, cervical vertebrae, and neuromuscular apparatus and can present as myofacial pain. Electromyographic recordings using surface electrodes were made bilaterally on the masseter, anterior temporalis, and digastric muscles in 641 craniomandibular patients, before and after transcutaneous electrical neural stimulation, at their initial presentation and following the insertion of mandibular orthopedic appliances. In the presenting patient, muscle-resting levels significantly decreased from hyperactive levels with transcutaneous electrical neural stimulation therapy. The creation of a new occlusal position with an orthotic appliance was found to correlate with a significant reduction in otolaryngologic symptoms as well as an increase in maximum muscle activity in function and coordination of muscle groups during mandibular movement. Thus, clinical electromyographic studies are an important aid in the treatment of craniomandibular disorders.
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PMID:Electromyography of masticatory muscles in craniomandibular disorders. 199 65

Lyme disease is a systemic illness caused by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi and transmitted by the bite of a tick in the Ixodes ricinus complex. While the illness is often associated with a characteristic rash, erythema migrans, patients may also present with a variety of complaints in the absence of the rash. The otolaryngologist may be called upon to see both groups of patients, with any number of signs and symptoms referable to the head and neck, including headache, neck pain, odynophagia, cranial nerve palsy, head and neck dysesthesia, otalgia, tinnitus, hearing loss, vertigo, temporomandibular pain, lymphadenopathy, and dysgeusia. We review our institutional experience with 266 patients with Lyme disease, 75% of whom experienced head and neck symptoms. We also summarize the diagnostic and treatment modalities for this illness.
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PMID:Otolaryngologic aspects of Lyme disease. 204 38

The commonest cause of the intracranial abscesses collected prospectively during the last two years was chronic middle ear infection (73%). The diagnosis was based on the clinical history, otological investigations, contrast enhanced computerized tomography and surgical findings. The clinical presentation was characterized by chronic otitis with an exacerbation of otorrhea, otalgia or pain in the temporal region or headache with high fever, vomiting and nausea. A review of our 14 patients with otogenic intracranial abscesses is reported to highlight that prompt diagnosis, appropriate therapy and careful monitoring can provide vastly improved results.
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PMID:Otogenic intracranial abscesses. 207 51

The efficacy and tolerability of morniflumate suppositories used together with phenoxymethylpenicillin were studied in a placebo-controlled, double-blind trial in 101 children with acute tonsillitis. Patients received a suppository containing 400 mg morniflumate or placebo twice daily for 4 days; all patients also received 1,500,000 IU/day phenoxymethylpenicillin. Response to treatment was assessed by clinical examination before and after 2 and 4 days' treatment. Efficacy was evaluated by resolution of oropharyngeal pain, congestion, fever, size and sensitivity of adenopathies, quality of life and duration of sleep. Body temperature fell rapidly after the start of treatment. There was also resolution of pharyngeal pain, earache, dysphagia and adenopathy. Spontaneous pharyngeal pain was present after 4 days in significantly (P = 0.03) fewer patients receiving morniflumate than receiving placebo. It is suggested that morniflumate combined with antibiotic therapy is an effective and well-tolerated treatment for tonsillitis in children.
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PMID:Double-blind, placebo-controlled multicentre trial of the efficacy and tolerance of morniflumate suppositories in the treatment of tonsillitis in children. 211 May 37

We tested the hypothesis that the administration of nitrous oxide (N2O) causes major (e.g., myocardial infarction, neuronal injury, hypoxemia, infection, death) or minor (e.g., nausea, vomiting, headache, earache) untoward effects in patients requiring anesthesia for 1.5-4 h. Given the higher morbidity and mortality associated with aging, we also tested whether aging increased any untoward effect of N2O. Finally, we investigated whether the substitution of N2O for a fraction of the anesthesia supplied by isoflurane altered the latter's pharmacologic effects. We studied 270 patients scheduled for elective total hip arthroplasty (n = 100), carotid endarterectomy (n = 70), or transsphenoidal hypophysectomy (n = 100) who were randomly assigned within each surgical group to receive isoflurane with or without 60% N2O. Regardless of patient age, we found no difference in major or minor untoward outcomes between anesthetic groups, nor a trend to suggest that a larger data cohort would reveal a significant adverse effect of N2O. The addition of N2O administration decreased the isoflurane requirement for clinical anesthesia but did not alter most of the clinical variables measured in practice, including blood pressure, heart rate, rate of recovery from anesthesia, development of postoperative pain, patient satisfaction with anesthesia, or duration of anesthesia or of hospitalization. Patients given N2O were no more likely to dream during anesthesia, remember events during anesthesia, or be frightened by those events. Our results support the continued use of N2O to anesthetize patients for elective surgery.
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PMID:Clinical pharmacology of nitrous oxide: an argument for its continued use. 224 Jun 27

Pain in the temporomandibular joint is primarily responsible for the morbidity often associated with this syndrome. Of the 448 cases in this study, 48% presented as ear pain and 46% complained of either headache, sinus pain, or neck pain. Temporomandibular joint pain and mastication muscle tenderness elicited with palpation were frequent physical findings. In this review, temporomandibular joint syndrome was successfully managed in 75% of 448 cases with conservative treatment consisting of patient education, heat, massage, non-narcotic analgesics, and occlusal splints. Seventeen percent were referred to dentists for restorations or orthodontics. The success rate for the 6% who underwent diagnostic arthroscopy and/or open joint surgery with disc replacement was 67%. Therefore, patients with ear pain or head and neck pain require an objective evaluation of medical history and physical examination to obtain the correct diagnosis and subsequent correct treatment and pain relief. Early diagnosis helps to prevent changes in the joint that can become irreversible with intractable pain. Surgery is reserved for those patients who fail to respond to conservative management.
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PMID:Managing temporomandibular joint syndrome. 229 2

A prospective, double-blind study was undertaken to compare the technique of removing tonsils using cold dissection with selective cauterization vs electrocautery dissection. The length of the procedure, blood loss, degree of pharyngeal pain, otalgia, and incidence of postoperative hemorrhage was recorded for 106 consecutive patients. In addition, our experience in performing the electrodissection tonsillectomy in 2431 patients is reviewed. Electrodissection tonsillectomy is a safe and effective procedure that offers several advantages over that of cold dissection using selective cautery.
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PMID:Electrodissection tonsillectomy. 229 11

Sixty-eight patients, who were determined clinically (by the presence of audible and palpable-joint sounds) and arthrographically to have meniscus displacement with reduction, had protrusive splints constructed, and the results were evaluated for a minimum of 1 year to a maximum of 3 years. Eighteen additional patients, arthrographically determined to have meniscus displacement with reduction, served as a nontreatment group for comparison. Odds ratios were calculated to compare the proportions of subjects who experienced follow-up symptoms on the two regimens. Results indicated that with splint therapy there was a statistically significant reduction of the intensity of jaw joint pain, temporal headache, ear pain, and pain in front of the ear, and there was a decrease in the probability of a closed lock condition developing. Splint therapy is less likely to reduce frontal headache, neck pain, and clenching of teeth.
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PMID:Use of protrusive splint therapy in anterior disk displacement of the temporomandibular joint: a 1- to 3-year follow-up. 230 94

The traditional ways of treating earache among the Lappish people have been charted. Generally speaking, the Lapps have treated earache by applying a compress to the ear, dropping various ear-drops into the external auditory canal, breathing into the ear, massaging the ear, and inserting impregnated wool into the ear canal. The Lappish treatment principles for earache are discussed in relation to modern knowledge of pain relief.
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PMID:Treatment of earache among the Lappish people. 232 15


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