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Lack of social support is becoming increasingly important as a psychosocial risk factor in the study of coronary heart disease (CHD). There may also be an association between vital exhaustion and lack of social support. Because most research has focused on men, we decided to explore the associations between structural and functional social support and first myocardial infarction (MI) in women. Subjects were 79 women hospitalized with a First MI (mean age 59.3; SD = 9.3) and 90 women hospitalized with an acute surgical event (mean age 57.4: SD = 9 1). MI cases reported more vital exhaustion than did controls (p < ,040), and exhausted women reported less structural (p < .001) and functional support (p < .000). After controlling for age, hypertension, diabetes, menopausal status, smoking, nonanginal pain, and vital exhaustion, multiple logistic regression analysis showed that poor structural support was associated with an increased risk for MI. These results suggest that social support is associated with vital exhaustion, which is a well-known risk factor for CHD. Furthermore, it is suggested that women with only a few confidants are more at risk for MI even after adjustment for well-known risk factors for CHD.
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PMID:Psychosocial risk factors for cardiovascular disease in women: the role of social support. 1625 Jul 75

Pruritus is an unpleasant sensory perception of the skin associated with the desire to scratch. As a physiological nociception, pruritus leads to the removal of harmful agents such as parasites and plants from the skin surface. More often, pruritus occurs as a severe and therapy-refractory symptom of various underlying dermatological and systemic diseases. Comparable to chronic pain, chronic pruritus worsens the general condition and may lead to physical and psychological exhaustion. Until the 1990s, pruritus had been regarded as an incomplete pain sensation. Only recently, itch was defined as a separate, pain-independent sensation with its own mediators, spinal neurons and cortical areas. These observations led to the development of new therapeutic modalities. This paper gives an overview of itch pathophysiology, clinical types and therapies.
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PMID:[Pruritus--pathophysiology, clinical features and therapy--an overview]. 1628 78

Somatic symptoms can occur in disease-free cancer patients. The causes of such symptoms in cancer can be many and varied. These could be due to anxiety, depression, somatization or a manifestation of illness behaviour. Somatic symptoms can also arise out of treatments for the cancer like radiation treatment or chemotherapy. Cancer related somatic symptoms have cognitive, psychological, and physiological causes, each of which is amenable to treatment. The occurrence of somatoform disorders in cancer patients is likely to complicate the treatment and outcome of the cancer. Common somatic symptoms in cancer have been found to be pain, fatigue, anorexia, tiredness or exhaustion, weakness, reduced energy, lethargy, and tremors. Breathlessness, muscle pain, dizziness, and palpitation are common symptoms of anxiety and panic attack which have also been noted in cancer patients. Somatic concern and preoccupation are also common. These symptoms create difficulty in diagnosing depression and anxiety in cancer patients, and leads to the need for modification of the standard diagnostic criteria. Somatic symptoms in cancer respond to counselling and psychopharmacotherapy. More research are needed on this area to understand the process of somatization in a somatic disease.
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PMID:Somatization in cancer. 1645 80

Aberrations of cardiovascular regulation and dysfunction of endogenous pain modulation have been reported in fibromyalgia (FM) patients. This study aimed at investigating the interactions between cardiovascular regulation and pain perception during static muscle contractions. Seventeen FM patients and 17 healthy controls performed a standardised static contraction (m. quadriceps femoris dx) until exhaustion. Blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), ratings of exertion/fatigue and pain intensity as well as pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) (at m. quadriceps dx and m. deltoideus dx) were assessed before, during and 15 min following contraction. Systolic and diastolic BP increased during contraction (p<0.001) and decreased following contraction (p<0.001) in both groups alike. A significant increase in HR was seen during contraction in FM patients (p<0.001), but not in healthy controls (difference between groups p<0.02). The rated exertion/fatigue and pain intensity increased more during contraction and remained elevated longer following contraction in the patient group. PPTs were lower in patients compared to controls at both sites at all times (p<0.001). No group differences in PPT changes over time were found. In conclusion, no indication of an attenuated cardiovascular response to exercise was found in our FM patients. The more pronounced HR increase in patients during contraction was most likely due to deconditioning. No exercise related change in PPTs was seen in either group, most likely due to insufficient exercise intensity, but the contraction induced pain was more pronounced in the FM patients.
Eur J Pain 2007 Jan
PMID:The effects of static muscular contraction on blood pressure, heart rate, pain ratings and pressure pain thresholds in healthy individuals and patients with fibromyalgia. 1648 Sep 6

In spite of the documented benefits of cardiac rehabilitation program (CRP) participation, older adults are not likely to participate. Older adults' expectations of and experiences with CRPs are not known. It is also not known whether women and men differ in their expectations and experiences. This descriptive study used a convenience sample of 40 older adults who had experienced an acute cardiac event to identify patients' views of CRPs. Focus groups revealed that older adults do not have an accurate understanding of what to expect in CRPs, and that older adults' experiences in CRPs were generally positive. Older adults suggested CRPs could be improved by including more socialization opportunities, offering varied forms of exercise, enhancing teaching about stress management, and adapting teaching strategies. In this study, "strength of physician referral" was identified as the main reason for participating or not participating in a CRP. Older men feared physical pain with exercise and older women expressed a need for emotional support. A major finding in this study was the report of adverse events (i.e., exhaustion, collapse) during exercise experienced by individuals who did not go to a CRP. Because the majority of adults participating in CRPs are older, transforming CRPs to meet the needs of these older adults is important. Future research on the effectiveness of alternative CRP models will provide evidence to ensure the delivery of quality, cost-effective care.
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PMID:Older adults' views of cardiac rehabilitation program: is it time to reinvent? 1650 60

Dr. Lamaze introduced Natural Childbirth (ASD) in France in 1951. While this event is significant to the history of obstetrics and women's experience, we would like to concentrate upon another aspect here: how it is situated within the political debates of the period. In the midst of the Cold War, Lamaze was a sympathizer, although not a member of the Communist Party (PCF). He ran a maternity clinic for the CGT, a union affiliated with the PCE During a trip to Russia in 1951, he discovered a new method to relieve pain in labour through a psychological technique inspired by Pavlov. Upon his return, when he dedicated his energies towards the popularization of ASD, he looked for support from the PCF and to draw upon their propaganda network; this subsequently aroused suspicion and hostility. A few years later, ASD received the blessing of women's groups won over by its improvements to birthing. At the moment of Lamaze's triumph, he fell victim to a resurgence of Stalinism. With his team, he denounced the Soviet invasion of Hungary and lost the financial support of the unions which owned the clinic. Exhausted and profoundly disappointed, he died in March 1957.
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PMID:[Childbirth without pain. Politics in France during the cold war. ]. 1715 40

The purpose of this study was to investigate the force and electromyographic (EMG) signal recorded from the muscles immediately after a sustained fatiguing contraction with or without muscle pain. Ten subjects performed sustained dorsi- and plantarflexions at two contraction levels (50 and 80% of maximum voluntary contraction) until exhaustion with or without muscle pain induced by injection of 6% hypertonic saline in one of the torque producing muscles. The muscle pain intensity was scored on a visual analogue scale (VAS, 0-10 cm). The root mean square (RMS) of the surface EMG signal from plantarflexors and dorsiflexors were estimated during maximum voluntary contractions (MVC) and ramp contractions before and after the fatiguing task at 0, 5, 10 and 15 min during the recovery phase. VAS scores immediately after the contractions with hypertonic saline (on average 3.2 +/- 1.1 cm) progressively decreased during recovery and no pain was experienced 15 min after the contraction. After the painful contraction the RMS-EMG during MVC was on average decreased (23.4 +/- 7.4%) compared to the non-painful condition both in muscles where pain was previously induced and in non-painful synergists. During recovery, the slope of the torque-EMG curve during ramp contraction was significantly decreased (28.4 +/- 8.1%) after the painful contraction compared to the control contraction both for the muscle previously exposed to pain and also the other active synergists. The decreased EMG during recovery after painful contractions compared with control was not accompanied by significant reductions in force during MVC indicating a change in the strategy for motor unit recruitment. This study shows that localized muscle pain inhibits muscle activation and increases the effects of fatigue on EMG recovery curves both for painful and non-painful synergists probably by a central effect. These effects can modify the normal patterns of synergistic activation and can also generate overload problems in muscle pain patients if compensatory motor control strategies are applied.
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PMID:Localized muscle pain causes prolonged recovery after fatiguing isometric contractions. 1737 28

Recent empirical studies revealed that fostering patients' perception of meaning in their life is an essential task for palliative care clinicians. However, few studies have reported the effects of training programs for nurses specifically aimed at improving skills to relieve the meaninglessness of terminally ill cancer patients, and we have had no specific measurement instruments. The primary aims of this study were 1) to validate measurement tools to quantify nurses' self-reported practice and attitudes toward caring for terminally ill cancer patients feeling meaninglessness and 2) to explore the effects of the five-hour educational workshop focusing on meaninglessness on nurses' self-reported practice, attitudes toward caring for such patients, confidence, burnout, death anxiety, and meaning of life. A quasi-experimental pre-post questionnaire survey was performed on 147 nurses. The questionnaire was distributed before the intervention workshop and one and six months after. The workshop consisted of lecture, role-play, and the exercise of assessment and care planning based on two vignette verbatim records. First, using the first questionnaire sample and an additional sample of 20 nurses for the test-retest examination, we validated a six-item Self-Reported Practice scale, and an eight-item Attitudes Toward Caring for Patients Feeling Meaninglessness scale with three subscales (Willingness to Help, Positive Appraisal, and Helplessness). The nurses also completed a scale to assess confidence in caring for terminally ill patients with meaninglessness, the Maslach Burnout Inventory, the Death Attitude Inventory, the Frommelt Attitudes Toward Care of the Dying scale, the Self-Reported Practice Score in General Communication, and the three pain-related items from the Palliative Care Quiz for Nursing. For the Self-Reported Practice scale and the subscales of the Attitudes Toward Caring for Patients Feeling Meaninglessness scale, the Cronbach's alpha coefficients were 0.63-0.91, and the intra-class correlations were 0.89-0.94. The Self-Reported Practice scale significantly, but moderately, correlated with the Self-Reported Practice Score in General Communication (P=0.41). The Willingness to Help and Helplessness subscales significantly but weakly correlated with the Frommelt scale (P=-0.27, 0.21). Both scales did not correlate or minimally correlated with the Palliative Care Quiz for Nursing (P<0.20). The construct validity was confirmed using factor analysis. At the follow-up, of 147 nurses who participated in this workshop, 91 (62%) and 80 (54%) nurses responded. Self-reported practice and confidence significantly improved, whereas helplessness, emotional exhaustion, and death anxiety significantly decreased. The percentages of nurses who evaluated this program as "useful" or "very useful" were 79% (to understand the conceptual framework in caring for terminally ill patients with meaninglessness), 73% (to help in self-disclosing nurses' personal beliefs, values, and life goals), and 80% (to help in learning how to provide care for patients with meaninglessness). The Self-Reported Practice scale and the Attitudes Toward Caring for Patients Feeling Meaninglessness scale are reliable and valid tools to specifically quantify nurses' self-reported practice and attitudes toward caring for terminally ill cancer patients feeling meaninglessness of life. The five-hour workshop appeared to have a modest but significant beneficial effect on nurse-reported practice, attitudes, and confidence in providing care for terminally ill cancer patients feeling meaninglessness. Further educational intervention trials with control groups are promising.
J Pain Symptom Manage 2007 Aug
PMID:Meaninglessness in terminally ill cancer patients: a validation study and nurse education intervention trial. 1754 50

Current therapeutic options allow successful treatment in only part of the women presenting with endometriosis. Pain, fatigue/exhaustion, intensive and repeated therapies as well as a concentration on the disease lead to a variety of consequences concerning education/ profession, body perception, self-esteem, partnership/social contacts, sexuality and psychic well-being. Difficulties in becoming pregnant represent a further central problem in dealing with endometriosis. Therefore, biopsychosocial aspects should be integrated into current somatically oriented models of medical support.
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PMID:[Psychosomatic aspects of endometriosis--current state of scientific knowledge and clinical experience]. 1764 76

The pathogenesis of widespread pain and fibromyalgia (FM) is unknown. Altered responses from the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis, sympathetic nervous system and muscular system have been suggested as being of importance. The present study was undertaken to determine: (i) whether the sympathoadrenal response to repetitive isometric contractions until exhaustion is altered in patients with FM, and (ii) whether sympathoadrenal responses are associated with muscle fatigue and pain during exercise. Nineteen women with FM, and 19 healthy women matched for age, smoking and self-reported physical activity, participated. Maximal voluntary contraction (MVC), repetitive isometric contractions (6s contraction and 4s resting phases) were performed with both quadriceps muscles at 30% of MVC until exhaustion. Muscle activity was recorded from the quadriceps muscles by surface electromyography (EMG). Plasma adrenalin (Adr), noradrenalin (NAdr) and cortisol were measured and perceived exertion and pain reported during exercise. Attenuated Adr responses (p<0.001) with normal plasma NAdr and cortisol (p>0.19) responses were found during exercise in the FM group compared with the control group. Significantly higher EMG amplitude (%EMG(max)) during the contraction phases (p=0.001) was found in the FM than in the control group. Perceived exertion and pain responses to exercise were higher in the FM group than in the controls (p<0.001), without relationship to the sympathoadrenal responses. In conclusion; the exercise was perceived as being more painful and strenuous in the FM group. Muscle performance was altered with increased muscle activity during the exercise. Women with FM showed an attenuated Adr response to repetitive isometric exercise.
Eur J Pain 2008 Apr
PMID:Attenuated adrenergic responses to exercise in women with fibromyalgia--a controlled study. 1782 42


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