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

The purpose of this article is to provide guidelines for monitoring and assessing exercise tolerance. Monitoring and interpreting pulse rate, blood pressure, respiration, skin characteristics, fatigue, pain, coordination, and electrocardiography are discussed. The basis for applying these principles to graded-exercise-tolerance testing is also discussed.
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PMID:Assessing exercise tolerance: a review. 44 Nov 12

73 patients with definite active rheumatoid arthritis were treated with naproxen, 250 mg b.i.d. One month after the start of therapy the patients were examined as to following parameters: spontaneous pain and pain on movement, duration of morning stiffness, fatigue, grip strength, functional joint index, ESR and consumption of analgesics. On statistical analysis a significant improvement of all the parameters, with the exception of ESR was shown, 52 of the 73 patients were very satisfied resp. satisfied with the treatment, whereas the physician evaluated the therapeutic results as very good to good in 49 of the cases. In 50 of the patients the therapy with naproxen, 250 mg b.i.d., was continued for two more months. In most of these cases it was possible to achieve an additional improvement in the parameters evaluated. Unwanted side effects occurred in 7 patients, of which in 4 the treatment had to be discontinued (in two cases because of dyspepsia and once each because of an angioneurotic edema and a recurrence of a peptic ulcer, respectively). The three patients in whose cases therapy was continued suffered from mild gastrointestinal disturbances.
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PMID:[Treatment of progressive chronic polyarthritis with a non-steroidal antirheumatic agent with a long half-life]. 44 68

Postoperative physiatric treatment is an integral part of the replacement of hips, knees, ankles, shoulders, elbows, wrists, and digital joints. Neuromuscular substitution patterns and incoordination usually prevail after joint replacement because of the usual long-term expectation and experience of pain, limitation of motion, fatigue, weakness, and the unavoidable operative trauma. The goals of postoperative physiatric treatment, in line with those of joint replacement surgery, are relief of pain and reestablishment of comfortable, normal neuromuscular functions and their reasonable, safe application in appropriate activities of daily living and of locomotion. By close collaboration between the Department of Orthopedic Surgery and that of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, certain principles and detailed protocols of postoperative management have been developed over the last 10 years. These are described in some detail for each of the joint replacements. Optimal results can be achieved only through meticulous attention to physical and psychosocial details, with close cooperation and communication among the involved services and persons.
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PMID:Total joint arthroplasty: principles and guidelines for postoperative physiatric management. 47 Apr 59

In an effort to determine the usefulness of prodromata for predicting a myocardial infarction, a prospective analysis was made of 211 consecutive patients with chest pain who were admitted to the Stanford University Medical Center Coronary Care Unit. In their subsequent course, 91 patients had a myocardial infarction, 102 had a myocardial infarction ruled-out, and 18 had a noncardiac etiology for their chest pain. Prodromal chest pain in the previous six months had occurred in 65% of patients and unstable angina in 61%. Infarction versus noninfarction patient groups could not be identified on the basis of prodromal ill health, chest pain, unstable angina, typical versus atypical nature of the chest pain, or activity at the onset of pain. Complaints of preceding fatigue and increased perceived stress were common in both groups. Activity at the onset of the admission chest pain was strenuous in 15% of the infarction patients and 12% of the noninfarction patients. We conclude that prodromal symptoms are common in both infarction and noninfarction patients. Although chest pain probably remains the single most frequent identifier of a new cardiac event, it is common in noninfarction patients and cannot be used alone to predict infarction or death.
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PMID:Prodromal characteristics as indicators of cardiac events in patients hospitalized for chest pain. 49 4

The Committee on Cervicobrachial Syndrome in Japan Association of Industrial Health (JAIH) made a report on the questionnaires for checking for the complaints of patients suffering from Occupational Cervicobrachial Disorder (OCD). In order to reveal how the complaints develop in the progress of OCD, we analysed the complaints of 117 workwomen in assembly lines of a cigarette factory by using the questionnaires. And the followings were made clear: 1) At the mild stage of OCD, stiffness or dullness at the neck and shoulders, and eyestrain become remarkable. 2) At the moderate stage, pain at the neck, shoulders, arms and hands, dullness at extremities, general fatigue, pain or heavy feeling in the head, increased irritability etc. become remarkable in addition to the mild stage complaints. 3) At the severe stage, pain and dullness at the back, numbness at arms and hands, hand coldness, sleep disturbance etc. become remarkable in addition to the moderate stage complaints. 4) Various sufferings in daily life such as "I want to lie down at rest time," "I lack patience to go on reading long," "It is hard for me to go on writing long," and "Fixed sitting soon tires me" become more and more frequent as the stage advances. We consider it is important in the diagnosis of OCD to pay attention to the general symptoms such as general fatigue, pain or heavy feeling in the head, increased irritability and sleep disturbance, together with complaints at the neck, shoulders, arms and hands.
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PMID:Studies on the progress of occupational cervicobrachial disorder by analysing the subjective symptoms of work-women in assembly lines of a cigarette factory. 52 87

The spherocentric knee, designed to allow triaxial rotation and provide intrinsic stability, includes desirable design features of metal on high density polyethelene bearing surfaces, metal support for all plastic components, metal-cement-bone interfacing for all fixation surfaces, sufficient strength to eliminate fatigue fracture of metallic components as a potential source of failure, cam deceleration for hyperextension control, and an inverted central plastic socket which minimizes wear. The system assures a low coefficient of friction and thereby minimizes loosening. This prosthesis has been used for surgical arthroplasty in 134 knees with gross instability or severe fixed deformity or both, in which optimal results would not have been anticipated with non-articulated resurfacing prostheses. The patients have been followed for an average of nearly 3 years (range one to 5 years). Results in terms of correction of deformity, improvement of stability, range of motion, pain relief and improved function, have been outstanding. Problems of infection, loosening and fracture of adjacent bone have been less than with other intrinsically stable prostheses (hinge prostheses) and are less than most reports of non-articulated resurfacing prostheses followed for a comparable time. There have been no failures within the prosthesis. Our loose prostheses represent failures that occurred between the prostheses and the bone. The spherocentric prosthesis is the prosthesis of choice for arthroplasty of a knee with severe preoperative deformity or severe instability or both in which optimal results would not be anticipated following insertion of a resurfacing type of prosthesis.
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PMID:Spherocentric knee arthroplasty. 53 60

Five cases of a chronic neuromuscular syndrome consisted of muscular aching and sometimes burning pain, fasciculations, cramps, fatigue, and occasional paresthesia. The disorder affected the legs and, less commonly, the girdle, trunk, and arm muscles. The symptoms were enhanced by physical activity and were usually improved by rest. Neither muscular wasting nor weakness was found, although the condition was present for an average of 4.7 years and, in one patient, as long as 10 years. Electrophysiologic studies showed motor abnormalities indicative of axonal degeneration and muscle fiber denervation, most marked in the legs. Light microscopy of skeletal muscle and spinal cord in one case disclosed evidence of mild denervation atrophy in muscle, but no loss of anterior horn cells. The findings are compatible with a benign polyneuropathy.
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PMID:The muscular pain-fasciculation syndrome. 56 28

Research suggests that kinesthetic aftereffect (KAE) scores reflect status on a postulated stimulus intensity modulation (SIM) mechanism that damps down subjective stimulus intensity for some (reducing) and increases it for others (augmenting). Such a mechanism would help account for empirically observed individual differences in such behaviors as pain tolerance, sensory deprivation reactivity, and stimulation seeking. It was hypothesized and confirmed in three adult female samples that KAE varies curvilinearly over the menstrual cycle: Greater KAE reduction occurs at the cycle's beginning and end. Neither tiredness, oral contraception, medication, attention, nor social expectations can explain this finding. Of the behaviors studied in the KAE literature, only five are also encompassed by the menstrual cycle literature. Four of these (antisocial behavior, acute schizophrenic episodes, accidents, and activity level) show similar curvilinearity over the cycle. We hypothesize that cyclical variation in the SIM mechanism mediates the curvilinear pattern observed for both these four behaviors and KAE.
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PMID:Menstrual cycle affects kinesthetic aftereffect, an index of personality and perceptual style. 57 17

Two hundred and ninety-five male Finnish concrete reinforcement workers, aged 19 to 64 years and engaged in heavy physical work including prolonged stooping, were radiologically examined by antero-posterior and lateral views of the lumbar spine while they were standing. The findings of lumbar disc degeneration were classified as none, slight, moderate or severe. The prevalence and degree of radiologically detectable lumbar disc degeneration depended strongly on age and increased especially rapidly from 40 to 44 years on. Lumbar disc degeneration showed an age-independent association to both a history of lumbago (chi2 = 10.5, p less than 0.01) and a history of sciatica (chi2 = 11.8, p less than 0.001). When disc degeneration was compared to reports of stiffness, fatigue, ache, and sharp pain in the back during an ordinary workday, no statistically significant associations were found, while disc degeneration was found to be slightly more common (chi2 = 4.6, p less than0.05) in the men reporting back symptoms as they bent down than in the men who did not report such symptoms. No association between length of exposure to static and dynamic back loads in reinforcement work and the prevalence of lumbar disc degeneration could be established, but definite conclusions on the possible effect of reinforcement work on the lumbar spine could not be drawn from the data.
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PMID:Radiologically detectable lumbar disc degeneration in concrete reinforcement workers. 66 71

During the course of an obscure illness in a teenage girl it was eventually realized that the diagnosis was 'epidemic neuromyasthenia'. The illness which occurred between February and September 1976 was characterized by fatigue, pallor, headache, nuchal pain, alterations in mentation, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, paraesthesiae, weakness and heaviness of limbs, and a prolonged relapsing course. Investigation brought to light fourteen patients with similar symptoms--twelve female and two male. In view of the shortcomings of retrospective enquiries, especially those involving the assessment of notes made by other people, and the problem of trying to define a nonfatal illness with protean symptoms, many of a nonspecific nature, with few physical findings and negative laboratory studies, caution is necessary. Under these circumstances it is claimed on clinical epidemiological evidence that a diagnosis of 'epidemic neuromyasthenia' could be sustained confidently in three patients and probably in a fourth. Six patients were considered possible cases and four were rejected.
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PMID:'Epidemic neuromyasthenia' in Southwest Ireland. 74 20


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