Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although formalin instillation has been proven to be an effective treatment of hemorrhagic radiation proctitis, different techniques with varying success rates have been reported. The aim of this study was to assess our experience with formalin instillation for the treatment of radiation proctitis. After Institutional Review Board approval, all patients who presented with radiation proctitis and were treated with 4% formalin instillation were identified from a prospective database. Techniques of instillation were as follows: a formalin-soaked sponge stick was applied via a proctoscope (SS) and placed at each quadrant with a mean contact of 2.5 minutes (range, 0.5-3 minutes), or the formalin solution was introduced through a proctoscope in aliquots for a total of 350 to 400 mL irrigation (IR), with a mean contact time of 30 seconds in each aliquot. The patients were divided into two groups according to the method of formalin instillation and their outcomes were compared. Between March 1995 and September 2003, 21 patients who underwent formalin treatment were identified: 17 patients were in the SS and 4 patients were in the IR group. The mean age was 74.8+/-6.4 years and 70.5+/-6.8 years and the male/female ratio was 16:1 and 3:1 in the SS and IR groups, respectively. Indications for radiation therapy were prostate cancer in 19 patients: 16 (95.1%) SS patients and 3 (75%) IR patients. Four (23.5%) patients in the SS group were receiving anticoagulants or antiplatelet medications before the procedure. The mean duration of bleeding before formalin instillation was 11.7 months (range, 2-48 months) in the SS and 10.5 months (range, 7-12 months) in the IR group. Sixteen (94.1%) patients in the SS and 4 (100%) in the IR group had previous treatments for radiation proctitis, including hydrocortisone enema, 5-aminosalicylate mesalamine, and endoscopic coagulation. Eight (47.1%) patients in the SS and 2 (50%) in the IR group received a preprocedural blood transfusion, and 1 patient in the SS group required a blood transfusion after the formalin instillation. This patient subsequently underwent restorative proctosigmoidectomy because of persistent bleeding. The mean length of the procedure was 27.1+/-10.8 minutes in the SS group and 22.5+/-6.5 minutes in the IR group. The bleeding was successfully stopped on the first attempt in 14 patients (82.4%) in the SS group and 3 (75%) in the IR group. The instillation was repeated in 1 patient (5.9%) in the SS group and in 1 (25%) in the IR group. Four patients (23.5%) in the SS group experienced
rectal pain
after the procedure. One patient (5.9%) developed a new onset of fecal incontinence, while another (5.9%) had anococcygeal
pain
accompanied by worsening of fecal incontinence. One patient (25%) in the IR group developed acute colitis consistent with formalin instillation, which was managed by intravenous antibiotics. The patients were followed for a mean of 10 months (range, 1 to 38 months). Formalin instillation is effective in controlling refractory hemorrhage secondary to radiation proctitis.
...
PMID:Formalin instillation for hemorrhagic radiation proctitis. 1603
This report defines criteria for diagnosing functional anorectal disorders (ie, fecal incontinence, anorectal
pain
, and disorders of defecation). Functional fecal incontinence is defined as the uncontrolled passage of fecal material recurring for > or =3 months in an individual with a developmental age of > or =4 years that is associated with: (1) abnormal functioning of normally innervated and structurally intact muscles, and/or (2) no or minor abnormalities of sphincter structure and/or innervation insufficient to explain fecal incontinence, and/or (3) normal or disordered bowel habits (ie, fecal retention or diarrhea), and/or (4) psychological causes. However, conditions wherein structural and/or neurogenic abnormalities explain the symptom, or are part of a generalized process (eg, diabetic neuropathy) are not included within functional fecal incontinence. Functional fecal incontinence is a common, but underrecognized symptom, which is equally prevalent in men and women, and can often cause considerable distress. The clinical features are useful for guiding diagnostic testing and therapy. Functional anorectal
pain
syndromes include proctalgia fugax (fleeting
pain
) and chronic
proctalgia
; chronic
proctalgia
may be subdivided into levator ani syndrome and unspecified anorectal
pain
, which are defined by arbitrary clinical criteria. Functional defecation disorders are characterized by 2 or more symptoms of constipation, with > or =2 of the following features during defecation: impaired evacuation, inappropriate contraction of the pelvic floor muscles, and inadequate propulsive forces. Functional disorders of defecation may be amenable to pelvic floor retraining by biofeedback therapy (such as dyssynergic defecation).
...
PMID:Functional anorectal disorders. 1667 64
Visceral pain processing is abnormal in a majority of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients. Aberrant endogenous nociceptive modulation and anticipation are possible underlying mechanisms investigated in the current study. Twelve IBS patients and 12 matched healthy controls underwent brain fMRI scanning during the following randomised stimuli: sham and painful rectal distensions by barostat without and with simultaneous activation of endogenous descending nociceptive inhibition using ice water immersion of the foot for heterotopic stimulation. Heterotopic stimulation decreased
rectal pain
scores from 3.7+/-0.2 to 3.1+/-0.3 (mean+/-SE, scale 0-5) in controls (p<0.01), but not significantly in IBS. Controls differed from IBS patients in showing significantly greater activation bilaterally in the anterior insula, SII and putamen during rectal stimulation alone compared to rectal plus heterotopic stimulation. Greater activation during rectal plus heterotopic versus rectal stimulation was seen bilaterally in SI and the right superior temporal gyrus in controls and in the right inferior lobule and bilaterally in the superior temporal gyrus in IBS.
Rectal pain
scores were similarly low during sham stimulation in both groups, but brain activation patterns differed. In conclusion, IBS patients showed dysfunctional endogenous inhibition of
pain
and concomitant aberrant activation of brain areas involved in
pain
processing and integration. Anticipation of
rectal pain
was associated with different brain activation patterns in IBS involving multiple interoceptive, homeostatic, associative and emotional areas, even though
pain
scores were similar during sham distension. The aberrant activation of endogenous
pain
inhibition appears to involve circuitry relating to anticipation as well as
pain
processing itself.
Pain
2006 Dec 15
PMID:Cortical effects of anticipation and endogenous modulation of visceral pain assessed by functional brain MRI in irritable bowel syndrome patients and healthy controls. 1684 94
Late radiation proctopathy is a painful and vexing complication of prostate radiation. We report a case of a 55-year-old man with prostate cancer, and complaints of tenesmus and severe
rectal pain
after radiation therapy. The patient was diagnosed with a locally advanced Gleason score 8 prostate cancer and an increased prostate-specific antigen of 42.3 ng/ml. His past medical history was notable for a history of bilateral lymph node dissection complicated by Clostridium difficile colitis. He subsequently received 3-dimensional conformal radiation therapy. Seven months after completing therapy, minor rectal bleeding and significant
pain
developed, requiring increasing doses of opioid analgesics. Fourteen months after 3-dimensional conformal radiation therapy, sigmoidoscopy revealed a single chronic deep ulcer at the anorectal junction. As an alternative to diverting colostomy, the patient underwent a course of hyperbaric oxygen. Within 1 month of completing hyperbaric oxygen treatment, his symptoms completely resolved. Nine months from completion of hyperbaric oxygen therapy, he has had no recurrence of symptoms. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy can be considered a treatment option after failure of standard treatments in patients with severe radiation proctopathy.
...
PMID:Treatment of a radiation-induced rectal ulcer with hyperbaric oxygen therapy in a man with prostate cancer. 1713 31
Paroxysmal extreme
pain
disorder (PEPD), previously known as familial
rectal pain
(FRP, OMIM 167400), is an inherited disease causing intense burning rectal, ocular, and submandibular
pain
and flushing. Fertleman et al. (this issue of Neuron) show that mutations in SCN9A, the gene encoding the sodium channel Na(V)1.7 channels, are responsible for this syndrome. Together with earlier work implicating a distinct class of functional mutations in SCN9A in a distinct inherited
pain
syndrome, these results point to Na(V)1.7 channels as key players in signaling nociceptive information and as a potential target for drug therapy of chronic pain.
...
PMID:Painful channels. 1714 99
Paroxysmal extreme
pain
disorder (PEPD), previously known as familial
rectal pain
(FRP, or OMIM 167400), is an inherited condition characterized by paroxysms of rectal, ocular, or submandibular
pain
with flushing. A genome-wide linkage search followed by mutational analysis of the candidate gene SCN9A, which encodes hNa(v)1.7, identified eight missense mutations in 11 families and 2 sporadic cases. Functional analysis in vitro of three of these mutant Na(v)1.7 channels revealed a reduction in fast inactivation, leading to persistent sodium current. Other mutations in SCN9A associated with more negative activation thresholds are known to cause primary erythermalgia (PE). Carbamazepine, a drug that is effective in PEPD, but not PE, showed selective block of persistent current associated with PEPD mutants, but did not affect the negative activation threshold of a PE mutant. PEPD and PE are allelic variants with distinct underlying biophysical mechanisms and represent a separate class of peripheral neuronal sodium channelopathy.
...
PMID:SCN9A mutations in paroxysmal extreme pain disorder: allelic variants underlie distinct channel defects and phenotypes. 1714 94
Pudendal canal syndrome (PCS) is treated by pudendal canal (PC) decompression. We studied the hypothesis that failure of PCD to relieve anal and perianal
pain
could result from compression of the pudendal nerve (PN) not only in the PC but also in the sacral ligament clamp (SLC), i.e., in the space between sacrotuberous and sacrospinous ligaments. SLC release was performed in 21 patients with
proctalgia
who had not improved after PCD. PN terminal motor latency was higher than normal. The SLC release operation comprised entering the ischiorectal fossa through a para-anal incision, identifying the PN, and division of sacrospinous ligament. Treatment was successful in 17 patients and failed in 4. The former showed
pain
disappearance and improvement in fecal incontinence, perianal sensation, and anal reflex. Clinical manifestations and investigative results improved after SLC release in 80.9% of the cases. We assume that these results denote traumatization of the PN not only in the PC but also in the SLC.
...
PMID:Role of sacral ligament clamp in the pudendal neuropathy (pudendal canal syndrome): results of clamp release. 1739 Sep 16
Faecal urgency and incontinence with rectal hypersensitivity is a chronic, unexplained condition that is difficult to treat. The aim of this study was to determine if there was an altered level of the voltage gated tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-s) sodium channel Na(v)1.7 in rectal sensory fibres, since this channel has been implicated in clinical nociceptive disorders. Full thickness rectal biopsies from patients with physiologically characterised rectal hypersensitivity (n=7) were compared with control tissues (n=10). Formalin fixed specimens were studied by immunohistochemistry using affinity purified antibodies to Na(v)1.7 and the pan-neuronal structural marker PGP9.5, and the immunoreactive nerve fibres quantified by computerised image analysis. In rectal hypersensitivity, Na(v)1.7 immunoreactive nerve fibres were significantly increased in mucosal (P=0.0004), sub-mucosal (P=0.019), and muscle layers (P=0.0076), while PGP9.5 immunoreactive nerve fibres were increased significantly only in the mucosa (P=0.04); ratios of Na(v)1.7:PGP9.5 showed a significant increase in all layers, suggesting increased expression of Na(v)1.7, and nerve sprouting in the mucosa. The cause of this increase remains uncertain, but may be due to increase of nerve growth factor (NGF), which regulates the expression of both Na(v)1.7 and TRPV1, which we have previously reported to be increased in this condition. In paroxysmal extreme
pain
disorder (familial
rectal pain
), where the gene that encodes Na(v)1.7 is mutated, Na(v)1.7 protein was undetectable in the rectum (n=2), which suggests reduced Na(v)1.7 immunoreactivity or expression. Drugs that target Na(v)1.7-expressing nerve terminals may be useful for treating rectal hypersensitivity, and combining these with TRPV1 antagonists may enhance efficacy.
...
PMID:Voltage-gated ion channel Nav1.7 innervation in patients with idiopathic rectal hypersensitivity and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder (familial rectal pain). 1792 39
Stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) is a novel surgical technique for the treatment of intussusception and rectocele causing obstructed defecation. In this procedure, a double full-thickness rectal resection is performed transanally using two circular staplers. We describe the case of a patient complaining of persistent
pain
, tenesmus and fecal urgency after STARR. The patient also had an external rectal prolapse requiring an Altemeier rectosigmoid resection; during this operation we found and removed several staples that had stuck to the puborectalis muscle during STARR. Some degree of muscle inflammation was found at histological analysis. The patient recovered fully after this reintervention. Among the complications reported after STARR, the present one had not previously been described. The retained staples might have caused
proctalgia
in this patient.
...
PMID:Proctalgia in a patient with staples retained in the puborectalis muscle after STARR operation. 1806 Mar 61
Procedure for prolapsing hemorrhoids (PPH) and stapled transanal rectal resection for obstructed defecation (STARR) carry low postoperative
pain
, but may be followed by unusual and severe postoperative complications. This review deals with the pathogenesis, prevention and treatment of adverse events that may occasionally be life threatening. PPH and STARR carry the expected morbidity following anorectal surgery, such as bleeding, strictures and fecal incontinence. Complications that are particular to these stapled procedures are rectovaginal fistula, chronic
proctalgia
, total rectal obliteration, rectal wall hematoma and perforation with pelvic sepsis often requiring a diverting stoma. A higher complication rate and worse results are expected after PPH for fourth-degree piles. Enterocele and anismus are contraindications to PPH and STARR and both operations should be used with caution in patients with weak sphincters. In conclusion, complications after PPH and STARR are not infrequent and may be difficult to manage. However, if performed in selected cases by skilled specialists aware of the risks and associated diseases, some complications may be prevented.
...
PMID:Postoperative complications after procedure for prolapsed hemorrhoids (PPH) and stapled transanal rectal resection (STARR) procedures. 1870 Feb 45
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
Next >>