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

We performed a double-blind placebo-controlled trial of oral acyclovir in the treatment of first episodes of genital herpes simplex virus infections in 48 young adults (31 women and 17 men). Subjects were randomized to receive either placebo or acyclovir (200 mg per dose) five times daily for 10 days; they were examined on at least eight visits until healed and at monthly visits thereafter. Acyclovir treatment, as compared with placebo, significantly reduced virus shedding, new lesion formation after 48 hours, and the duration of genital lesions in both men and women. The total duration and severity of clinical symptoms (such as pain, adenopathy, dysuria, and malaise) were significantly reduced by acyclovir in both men and women by the third and fourth day, respectively (P less than or equal to 0.025), as compared with placebo. No toxicity was observed. Recurrence rates have so far been similar in placebo and acyclovir recipients. Oral acyclovir treatment of first-episode genital herpes simplex virus infections is clinically effective, but it does not seem to prevent virus latency or associated recurrent disease.
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PMID:Treatment of first episodes of genital herpes simplex virus infection with oral acyclovir. A randomized double-blind controlled trial in normal subjects. 633 23

A case of acute hemolytic streptococcal gangrene is presented. Typical signs of this disease are local pain, erythema, edema, formation of blisters, and gangrene. Malaise and fever are more unspecific. The special clinical feature of this postpartum case is discussed and compared with the literature. The therapy comprised extended incision of the vulva, application of antimicrobial agents, and exchange transfusion.
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PMID:[Postpartum streptococcal gangrene]. 634

A 20-year-old man with Crohn's disease was seen as an outpatient for pain in the left hip and gait disturbance. Initially, arthritis of the hip was suspected, because of the absence of fever or abdominal abnormalities. Two weeks later, fever, malaise, and pneumaturia developed and urine culture grew Escherichia coli. Laparotomy revealed a large occult retroperitoneal abscess on the left side, which had been irritating the psoas muscle. Surgical drainage effected complete recovery of hip function. The abscess in this patient had a very unusual presentation and was diagnosed chiefly through a high index of suspicion after a careful physical examination.
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PMID:Hip pain in patient with Crohn's disease. Occult retroperitoneal abscess as cause. 636 83

A 72-year-old woman suffered from giant cell arteritis (GCA) which developed into lingual infarction and monocular blindness. Temporary obscuration of vision and lingual symptoms such as increasing malaise, pain and intermittent claudication may precede the catastrophic results of arteritis. Emphasis is laid on early recognition and treatment of GCA.
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PMID:Lingual infarction and sudden blindness due to giant cell arteritis. 662 40

Telephone interviews were conducted with 111 patients with cutaneous melanoma and 107 controls to determine sun-exposure habits during various life periods. Painful or blistering sunburns during either childhood or adolescence were associated with subsequent increased risk of developing cutaneous melanoma. While solar exposure does not appear to be a factor in some patients, when patients were divided into subgroups by age, sex, or sun type, each subset showed some increased risk associated with a factor related to short-term excessive sun exposure. Ill effects due to such exposures appeared to increase the risk of melanoma.
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PMID:Sun exposure habits in patients with cutaneous melanoma: a case control study. 664 17

A retrospective study is presented of 19 patients with pleural mesothelioma diagnosed over an 18-year period (1964-1981). Two patients are alive after observation for 12 and 16 months. In 16 fatal cases the post-diagnosis survival time was 1-113 (median 17) months. One patient was lost to follow-up after 6 months. The male: female ratio was 5.3:1. The disease was most commonly detected in persons in their sixties and seventies. Pain and dyspnoea, the most common of the presenting symptoms, occurred in half of the patients. Weight loss and malaise were reported by six patients. Mesothelioma was most common on the right side, but often spread to the left, infiltrating the pericardium and the diaphragm. Metastases to abdominal organs were found in five of the eight autopsies, and in three other patients there were clinical signs of abdominal spread. Thoracotomy was performed in 12 patients, in one of whom radical removal of the tumor was attempted, but the patient died of recurrent tumor. Radiotherapy and cytostatic medication had no demonstrable effect on survival. Pleural effusion developed in all cases and all had roentgenologically demonstrated changes. Exposure to asbestos was documented in 6 of the 19 cases. In three asymptomatic patients the mesothelioma was incidentally revealed by routine X-ray examination, and these patients had significantly longer survival than the others. One of these tumors, however, had a relatively benign histologic appearance. Frequent X-ray examination of risk groups seems to offer the only prospect of improving management by earlier diagnosis.
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PMID:Malignant pleural mesothelioma. A clinical review of 19 patients. 671 76

Lyme disease, caused by a tick-transmitted spirochete, typically begins with a unique skin lesion, erythema chronicum migrans. Of 314 patients with this skin lesion, almost half developed multiple annular secondary lesions; some patients had evanescent red blotches or circles, malar or urticarial rash, conjunctivitis, periorbital edema, or diffuse erythema. Skin manifestations were often accompanied by malaise and fatigue, headache, fever and chills, generalized achiness, and regional lymphadenopathy. In addition, patients sometimes had evidence of meningeal irritation, mild encephalopathy, migratory musculoskeletal pain, hepatitis, generalized lymphadenopathy and splenomegaly, sore throat, nonproductive cough, or testicular swelling. These signs and symptoms were typically intermittent and changing during a period of several weeks. The commonest nonspecific laboratory abnormalities were a high sedimentation rate, an elevated serum IgM level, or an increased aspartate transaminase level. Early Lyme disease can be diagnosed by its dermatologic manifestations, rapidly changing system involvement, and if necessary, by serologic testing.
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PMID:The early clinical manifestations of Lyme disease. 685 26

The epidemiology, clinical course, diagnosis, and attempted treatments of herpes genitalis are reviewed. Herpes genitalis is an increasingly common sexually transmitted disease for which there is no effective treatment. It can occur in either sex and is mot commonly first found in patients 14 to 29 years old. Initial exposure to the virus may result in prolonged local symptoms (pain, itching, discharge) and signs (ulcerative lesions) as well as fever, malaise, myalgias, and fatigue. After the initial exposure, the virus may be found in a latent stage in the dorsal nerve root ganglia in the sacral area, and recurrences of disease may ensue. The frequency and clinical course of recurrent genital herpes can be of varying duration and severity. Although antiviral substances, immune potentiators, topical surfactants, and photodynamic inactivation have been used to treat genital herpes infections, there is no proven effective therapy.
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PMID:Genital herpes simplex virus infection: clinical course and attempted therapy. 701 31

The safety and immunogenicity of adw and ayw hepatitis B vaccines were compared in a double-blind randomized trial in Green Air Force recruits. One hundred and ten out of 240 eligible nonimmune recruits were randomly selected and allocated to the two vaccine treatment groups. Two 20-micrograms doses 1 month apart and a third 20-micrograms booster dose, at 6 months, were given intramuscularly. Severe local or general side effects were not observed. The frequency of mild side effects (local discomfort or pain, fever less than 37.5 degrees C, and malaise) was slightly higher than the adw than with the ayw vaccine. Antibodies developed earlier and in higher titers in adw vaccines. However, after the booster dose all ayw and all but one adw vaccines developed anti-HBs in almost similar titers. It is concluded that both vaccines are equally safe and immunogenic after administration of two doses at a 1-month interval followed by a booster dose at 6 months.
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PMID:Comparison of safety and immunogenicity of ADW and AYW hepatitis B vaccines. 704 81

On the suggestion of a Chinese physician the author took up Tai Chi, a traditional Chinese exercise, in an attempt to relieve symptoms from his moderately severe ankylosing spondylitis. Conventional medical therapy, used over a 15 year period, had proven of only limited benefit. Tai Chi consists of a series of intricate exercise sequences, and after 2 1/2 years of daily practice the author now feels stronger and healthier than before. Pain, weakness and general malaise return if practice is neglected for as little as one week. It is felt that Tai Chi is of value in minimizing the flexion deformity of the spine. Improved skeletal muscle strength, limb co-ordination, balance, chest movement and ability to relax are further benefits.
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PMID:Tai Chi and ankylosing spondylitis--a personal experience. 718 8


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