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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pain
sensitivity has been found to be altered following exercise. A number of investigators have found diminished sensitivity to
pain
(hypoalgesia) during and following exercise. However, currently it is unknown whether there is a specific intensity of exercise that is required to produce this hypoalgesia response. Aerobic exercise, such as cycling and running, have been studied most often, and a number of different exercise protocols have been used in this research including: (i) increasing exercise intensity by progressively increasing the workloads; (ii) prescribing a particular exercise intensity based on a percentage of maximum; and (iii) having participants self-select the exercise intensity. Results indicate that hypoalgesia occurred consistently following high-intensity exercise. In the studies in which exercise intensity was increased by increasing workloads, hypoalgesia was found most consistently with a workload of 200 W and above.
Hypoalgesia
was also found following exercise prescribed at a percentage of maximal oxygen uptake (e.g. 60 to 75%). Results are less consistent for studies that prescribed exercise based on percentage of heart rate maximum, as well as for studies that let participants self-select the exercise intensity. However, there has not been a systematic manipulation of exercise intensity in most of the studies conducted in this area. In addition, the interaction between exercise intensity and exercise duration, more than likely influences whether hypoalgesia occurs following exercise. There is a need for research to be conducted in which both intensity and duration of exercise are manipulated in a systematic manner to determine the 'optimal dose' of exercise that is required to produce hypoalgesia. In addition, there is a need for more research with other modes of exercise (e.g. resistance exercise, isometric exercise) to determine the optimal dose of exercise required to produce hypoalgesia.
...
PMID:Exercise-induced hypoalgesia and intensity of exercise. 1207 75
Increased incidence of clinical
pain
complaints from patients with major depression, as well as increased experimental
pain
thresholds have been reported. The basis of this phenomenon remains unclear, as well as its relation to medication, clinical recovery, gender and lateralization of hemispheric function. We aimed to further elucidate heat
pain
perception in depression applying a testing battery including assessment (on both arms) of warmth perception, heat
pain
perception and heat
pain
tolerance, and the jaw opening reflex (duration of ES2 component) as a putative indicator of descending
pain
inhibition. The battery was applied to 20 patients and 20 age- and sex-matched controls. Patients were assessed: on admission (acutely depressed, off-medication), few days after admission (depressed, on medication), and after clinical recovery (mostly on medication), and controls at corresponding intervals. Significant elevated heat
pain
thresholds were found off and on medication in the acute stage (mainly in women) and after recovery on the right arm only. Elevated heat
pain
tolerance (on the right arm only) was seen in medicated patients in the acute and recovered stage. Significant prolongation of ES2 duration was only found in acutely depressed patients off medication. While confirming
hypalgesia
to heat
pain
in major depression, our findings demonstrate a close relation to gender and strong influence of lateralization after recovery. Altered
pain
processing at brain stem level might only partially be responsible for the observed finding.
...
PMID:Influence of gender and hemispheric lateralization on heat pain perception in major depression. 1276 57
Carpal tunnel syndrome affects approximately 3 percent of adults in the United States.
Pain
and paresthesias in the distribution of the median nerve are the classic symptoms. While Tinel's sign and a positive Phalen's maneuver are classic clinical signs of the syndrome,
hypalgesia
and weak thumb abduction are more predictive of abnormal nerve conduction studies. Conservative treatment options include splinting the wrist in a neutral position and ultrasound therapy. Orally administered corticosteroids can be effective for short-term management (two to four weeks), but local corticosteroid injections may improve symptoms for a longer period. A recent systematic review demonstrated that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, pyridoxine, and diuretics are no more effective than placebo in relieving the symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome. If symptoms are refractory to conservative measures or if nerve conduction studies show severe entrapment, open or endoscopic carpal tunnel release may be necessary. Carpal tunnel syndrome should be treated conservatively in pregnant women because spontaneous postpartum resolution is common.
...
PMID:Management of carpal tunnel syndrome. 1289 46
We report here a case of atypical Wallenberg's syndrome due to spontaneous vertebral artery (VA) dissection. A 52-year-old woman was admitted to our department because of a sudden onset of left orbital
pain
. Emergency CT scan disclosed no evidence of intracranial hemorrhage. Neurological examination at the time of the current admission, showed dysphagia, left soft palate palsy, hoarseness, left Horner syndrome,
hypalgesia
with thermohypesthesia on the right side of her face, however,
hypalgesia
with thermohypesthesia on the right side of her body. The diagnosis of atypical Wallenberg's syndrome was based on the above findings. MR images disclosed the infarcted lesion at the left lateral medulla depicted as high-intensity on T2-weighted & FLAIR images. We carried out conservative treatment with antiplatelet & hemodilution therapies and the blood pressure control. Left vertebral angiograms obtained 18 days after the onset, showed the segmental severe stenosis of the VA between the ramification of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) and the union of the VAs. In the venous phase, retention of contrast medium in the VA and the PICA was observed. The flow rate of the parent artery was decreased. We strongly suspected that her initial symptom of left orbital
pain
was due to dissection of the VA itself. Three-dimensional CT angiograms obtained 30 days after the onset, demonstrated the defect of the left VA between the ramification of the left PICA and the union of the VAs. Left vertebral angiograms obtained 36 days after the onset, showed the occlusion of the VA between the ramification of the PICA and the union of the VAs. The neurological findings gradually improved and the patient was discharged. Follow up left vertebral angiograms obtained 4 months & 16 months after the onset, revealed almost no changes of left VA occlusion.
...
PMID:[Atypical Wallenberg's syndrome due to spontaneous vertebral arterial dissection: case report]. 1532 42
The association between systemic hypertension and headache remains controversial and its pathophysiologic basis is uncertain. A rather characteristic early-morning pulsating headache is commonly seen in hypertensive patients, and a recent meta-analysis supports the link between these 2 entities. Epidemiologic evidence has paradoxically suggested a negative association between hypertension and headache. Unpredictable clinical association between severe hypertension and headache indicates that another cranial perfusion-related variable exerts a critical role. Neuroanatomically, head and neck pain primarily involves the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve (V1). A link between systemic hypertension, pulsatile choroidal blood flow (CBF), and intraocular pressure (IOP) has been established. I propose that a trait ocular sympathetic hypofunction permits rapid episodic ocular choroidal overperfusion that stretches the ocular globe in the cohort of hypertensive patients with headache. Rapid distension of the
pain
-sensitive corneoscleral envelope can stimulate corneoscleral and iridial
pain
-sensitive V1 nerve endings and generate headache. Ocular tamponade function physiologically limits choroidal overperfusion. A higher basal IOP in some patients with moderate-to-severe hypertension may dampen pulsatile CBF and account for the negative epidemiologic link between sustained systemic hypertension and headache. Besides activation of the baroreceptor reflex, the association of
hypalgesia
with hypertension probably involves activation of the vasopressin-endorphin adaptive system consequent to mechanical stimulation of V1. The analogy between hypertensive headache and angle-closure glaucoma is rather limited because typical ocular and visual signs and symptoms of angle-closure glaucoma are not seen in hypertension-related headache. Hypertensive crises, including those associated with pheochromocytoma, are not accompanied by attacks of angle-closure glaucoma. Glaucoma is not associated with ocular choroidal congestion, but with reduced pulsatile CBF. The predisposition to develop angle-closure glaucoma is theoretically not associated with ocular autonomic hypofunction and should be conceptually dissociated from this hypothesis. The hypothesis can be evaluated by establishing significant circadian elevations of blood pressure, including nondipping nighttime pattern as well as circadian and periheadache measurements of IOP in patients with attacks of hypertension-related headache.
...
PMID:Systemic hypertension, headache, and ocular hemodynamics: a new hypothesis. 1740 87
A series of studies with humans as well as experiments carried out on animals have shown that physical exercise leads to temporary hypoalgesia. Reduced sensitivity to
pain
is not only demonstrable after long-distance exercise (such as a marathon run) but also during and after intensive physical exercise on a laboratory ergometer. In a double blind study (20 mg naloxone versus placebo) experimental
pain
thresholds (electrical intracutaneous finger and dental pulp stimulation) and plasma hormone levels (beta-endorphin, cortisol, and catecholamines) were measured in ten healthy athletic men before, during, and after physical exercise on a cycle ergometer. A significant
pain
threshold elevation during exercise was found for finger (Anova,p<0.004) and dental pulp stimulation (p<0.01).
Hypoalgesia
remained present after exercise was stopped and the initial
pain
threshold level was returned to approximately 60 minutes after the exercise. The subjective magnitude estimation of suprathreshold stimuli was significantly reduced (p<0.001) after exercise. Naloxone failed to affect
pain
thresholds and plasma beta-endorphin did not correlate significantly with
pain
thresholds. The cause of the exercise-induced hypoalgesia is probably an activation of central
pain
inhibitory mechanisms by the "stimulus" of physical exercise (stimulation-induced analgesia). Central pain inhibitory systems are probably thereby activated by the stimulation of afferent nerves endings (group III and IV) in the skeletal muscle. The same trigger mechanism also plays a role as a release stimulus for hormones which are secreted in increased measure during physical exercise (catecholamines, pituitary hormones). Plasma beta-endorphin is probably not directly involved in the exercise-induced hypoalgesia but is rather a "marker" for the activating of central analgesia mechanisms.
...
PMID:[Physical exercise, endogenous opiates and pain regulation.]. 1841 88
From August 1981 to May 1993 a total of 1263 percutaneous retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomies after Hakanson were performed. The intervention was performed with X-ray monitoring under local anaesthesia and rarely lasted longer than 20 min. It achieved good results in the treatment of idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia (TN) and symptomatic trigeminal neuralgia due to multiple sclerosis (TNMS). Some 97% of the TN patients were completely free of
pain
after the intervention. The recurrence rate within 5 years was 12.8%. Some 94.7% of the TNMS patients were immediately free of
pain
, but within 2-5 years they experienced a high recurrence rate of 40.2%. The results in the patients with atypical facial pain were more disappointing: only 66.6% were
pain
-free immediately after the intervention, and the recurrence rate was 31%. With respect to the side effects immediately postoperatively, herpetic eruptions were found in 43.2% of cases. They occurred on the 3rd postoperative day and persisted for 2-3 weeks before being relieved by local virostatic therapy. Hypaesthesia and
hypalgesia
were present in the early postoperative follow-up in half of our patients. Both these reductions of sensitivity have a tendency to regress. Later, after 2 years, there was reduction in sensitivity of this type in only 20% of cases. In the follow-up 17.5% of our patients complained of dysaesthesia and in 21.4% corneal sensitivity was reduced or lost. We believe that glycerol rhizotomy, owing to its effectiveness, easy applicability, slight distress for the patients and low side effects, should be recommended as a first measure for non-conservative treatment of idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia as well as trigeminal neuralgia in multiple sclerosis.
...
PMID:[Experience with retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomy in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia.]. 1841 60
IL-2 and IL-15 were tested for effects on responses to mechanical or thermal stimuli when spinally administered to male Sprague-Dawley rats with surgically implanted intrathecal catheters. Restricted doses of both IL-2 and IL-15 produced increased responsiveness to mechanical stimulation of the hindpaws. This effect lasted up to 48 h. IL-2 had biphasic effects on thermal responses whereas IL-15 produced thermal
hypalgesia
alone. These effects dissipated within 24h. These results suggest that IL-2 and IL-15 may participate in the generation of hyperalgesia in some
pain
conditions.
...
PMID:Spinal injection of IL-2 or IL-15 alters mechanical and thermal withdrawal thresholds in rats. 1842 67
The artery of Desproges-Gotteron is rarely mentioned in the literature and is unfamiliar to most neurosurgeons. The authors report a unique case of an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) of the conus in an adult woman, which received blood supply from an artery of Desproges-Gotteron. The patient presented with intermittent
pain
radiating down the right posterior thigh and foot and transient bladder incontinence. On examination, there was weakness of the right lower limb with
hypalgesia
of the plantar aspect of the right foot. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a mass near the anterior aspect of the conus medullaris and angiography confirmed a spinal AVM at the L-1 level and a shunt located at the inferior L-3 level. The patient underwent transarterial embolization, and at 2-year follow-up, repeat angiography demonstrated no evidence of residual or recurrent spinal AVM, intermittent and tolerable
pain
without treatment interventions, and a normal neurological examination. The artery of Desproges-Gotteron appears to be a rare arterial variation. Moreover, the authors believe this to be the first case of a conal AVM supplied by such an artery. The anatomy and implications of such an arterial variant are discussed.
...
PMID:Arteriovenous malformation of the conus supplied by the artery of Desproges-Gotteron. 2127 51
Carpal tunnel syndrome is the most common entrapment neuropathy, affecting approximately 3 to 6 percent of adults in the general population. Although the cause is not usually determined, it can include trauma, repetitive maneuvers, certain diseases, and pregnancy. Symptoms are related to compression of the median nerve, which results in
pain
, numbness, and tingling. Physical examination findings, such as
hypalgesia
, square wrist sign, and a classic or probable pattern on hand symptom diagram, are useful in making the diagnosis. Nerve conduction studies and electromyography can resolve diagnostic uncertainty and can be used to quantify and stratify disease severity. Treatment options are based on disease severity. Six weeks to three months of conservative treatment can be considered in patients with mild disease. Lifestyle modifications, including decreasing repetitive activity and using ergonomic devices, have been traditionally advocated, but have inconsistent evidence to support their effectiveness. Cock-up and neutral wrist splints and oral corticosteroids are considered first-line therapies, with local corticosteroid injections used for refractory symptoms. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, diuretics, and pyridoxine (vitamin B6) have been shown to be no more effective than placebo. Most conservative treatments provide short-term symptom relief, with little evidence supporting long-term benefits. Patients with moderate to severe disease should be considered for surgical evaluation. Open and endoscopic surgical approaches have similar five-year outcomes.
...
PMID:Carpal tunnel syndrome. 2253 64
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