Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) is associated with enhanced pain sensitivity. The present study explores the role of personality on the perception of noxious stimuli among women with VVS. More specifically, the aim of the study was to explore whether the personality traits assessed by Cloninger's Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire (TPQ) (harm avoidance [HA], novelty seeking [NS], and reward dependence [RD]) are associated with the augmented pain perception in women with VVS. Quantitative sensory tests were applied to the forearm of 98 women with VVS and 135 control subjects, all of whom completed the TPQ. The women with VVS scored higher than the control subjects on HA and RD with no significant differences in NS. Linear regression analyses revealed that in the VVS group, lower pain thresholds and higher magnitude estimations of suprathreshold pain stimuli were associated with higher HA and RD scores. The enhanced pain perception among women with VVS might reflect their tendency to respond intensely to signals of reward and to elevate the perceived risk. This might lead them to avoid hazards by overestimating the level of potential harm, as represented by greater pain sensitivity. The association between personality traits assessed by Cloninger's Tridimensional Personality Questionnaire, ie, harm avoidance, novelty seeking, and reward dependence, and the enhanced perception of noxious stimuli in vulvar vestibulitis syndrome might suggest neurochemical mechanisms of pain experience affected by personality, with possible application for future treatment approaches toward pain disorders.
J Pain 2005 Mar
PMID:Personality traits associated with perception of noxious stimuli in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome. 1577 10

The prevalence of vulval vestibulitis was evaluated in a prospective observational study. Four hundred women from West Hertfordshire, 100 each from community family planning, antenatal, general practice and genitourinary clinics were investigated. Participants completed a questionnaire and were examined for vulval erythema and point tenderness. An algesiometer was also used to evaluate tenderness. The prevalence of vestibulitis varied from 2.9% to 9.8% depending on the stringency of diagnostic criteria and the method of ascertaining pain. Vulval vestibulitis cannot be accurately defined by current criteria, but superficial dyspareunia appears to be a frequent problem in the community in women consulting for unrelated matters.
...
PMID:Vulval vestibulitis: a common cause of dyspareunia? 1577 52

Vulvodynia (vulvar dysesthesia) refers to vulvar pain (burning, irritation and rawness) of the external female genitalia for more than 3 months without other dermatological or gynecological causes. The term primary vulvodynia should be reserved for vulvar vestibulitis and essential (dysesthetic) vulvodynia. Vulvar vestibulitis is characterized by dyspareunia, allodynia and vulvar erythema. Most patients are Caucasian, premenopausal and sexually active. The prevalence is estimated as high as 15%. Damage to the sympathetic nerves with an increased pain sensitivity is the likely explanation for the burning sensation. Psychological impairment, which is common in many patients, rather seems to be the consequence of the chronic disease than a primary condition. Essential vulvodynia is characterized by vulvar burning, which is characteristically not limited to the vestibulum. The patients are generally older and dyspareunia is less severe. The prevalence of essential vulvodynia is 1-3%. Various interdisciplinary approaches to these two rather frequent genital diseases are discussed.
...
PMID:[Vulvodynia]. 1590 52

Hypervigilance for pain-relevant stimuli has been associated with anxiety, fear of pain and anxiety sensitivity. This attentional bias has been primarily investigated in heterogeneous pain groups or pain-free controls, but has not been examined in pain conditions where anxiety and fear are likely to play a central role. Due to the intimate and interpersonal nature of genital pain experienced during sexual intercourse, Vulvar Vestibulitis Syndrome (VVS) constitutes an ideal sample in which to investigate the role of cognitive and affective factors in pain perception and maintenance. Seventeen women suffering from VVS and an equal number of age and education matched control women completed an emotional Stroop and memory recall task in addition to a series of questionnaires assessing pain-hypervigilance, state and trait anxiety, fear of pain, and anxiety sensitivity. VVS sufferers reported hypervigilance for coital pain and also exhibited a selective attentional bias towards pain stimuli on the emotional Stroop task as compared with controls. This effect was predicted by state and trait anxiety and fear of pain. According to these data, treament strategies for VVS should target anxiety and fear in addition to sensory systems.
Eur J Pain 2005 Aug
PMID:When sex hurts, anxiety and fear orient attention towards pain. 1597 23

This study assessed the association between pain perception and psychological variables in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) by comparing 28 VVS women with 50 healthy women. We assessed non genital systemic pain perception with quantitative sensory testing by administering experimental pain stimuli to the forearm. The VVS women demonstrated a lower pain threshold and a higher magnitude estimation of pain, combined with a higher trait anxiety, increased somatization, and a lower body image. Among the VVS women, nonvaginal pain catastrophizing was significantly related to reported pain during coitus. A cluster analysis revealed four subtypes of VVS women, as characterized by levels of pain and personality variables. I suggest implications for the assessment and treatment of women suffering from painful coitus.
...
PMID:Psychological factors associated with perception of experimental pain in vulvar vestibulitis syndrome. 1602 Jan 47

This review is based on a MEDLINE/PSYCHINFO search for all papers on psychological aspects of vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) published 1995-2002. VVS is a condition in which painful patches appear on the vulva which make intercourse painful. Causation, natural history and prevalence of VVS are unknown. Attempts to identify psychological characteristics typical of women with VVS have not yielded consistent results with some studies suggesting high levels of psychopathology and others not. It is suggested that inconsistencies in findings reflect not only decisions by women about whether and how to access health care but also the health care system acting to actively filter those reaching specialist services and selecting those with particular psychological characteristics. There is no compelling evidence that VVS per se is associated with any particular psychological or behavioural characteristics other than the sort of difficulties in sexual functioning which might be expected with chronic vulval pain. However there is evidence for high levels of psychological distress in some samples of women with VVS being seen in secondary care.
...
PMID:Psychological aspects of vulvar vestibulitis syndrome. 1605 May 35

Vaginal sEMG biofeedback and pelvic floor physical therapists' manual techniques are being increasingly included in the treatment of vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS). Successful treatment outcomes have generated hypotheses concerning the role of pelvic floor pathology in the etiology of VVS. However, no data on pelvic floor functioning in women with VVS compared to controls are available. Twenty-nine women with VVS were matched to 29 women with no pain with intercourse. Two independent, structured pelvic floor examinations were carried out by physical therapists blind to the diagnostic status of the participants. Results indicated that therapists reached almost perfect agreement in their diagnosis of pelvic floor pathology. A series of significant correlations demonstrated the reliability of assessment results across muscle palpation sites. Women with VVS demonstrated significantly more vaginal hypertonicity, lack of vaginal muscle strength, and restriction of the vaginal opening, compared to women with no pain with intercourse. Anal palpation could not confirm generalized hypertonicity of the pelvic floor. We suggest that pelvic floor pathology in women with VVS is reactive in nature and elicited with palpations that result in VVS-type pain. Treatment interventions need to recognize the critical importance of addressing the conditioned, protective muscle guarding response in women with VVS.
...
PMID:Pelvic floor muscle functioning in women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome. 1605 May 36

Cutaneous response to capsaicin has been used to assess central sensitization in pain research. This study compared the response to intradermal capsaicin in the forearm and foot of vulvar vestibulitis (vestibulodynia)-afflicted cases and controls. We hypothesized that cases will experience greater spontaneous pain, larger cutaneous areas of punctate hyperalgesia and dynamic allodynia, and greater vascular flow than controls. We also hypothesized enhanced post-injection pain in the foot compared to the forearm based on dermatome proximity of the foot and vulva. Methods. Ten vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) cases and 10 age and ethnically matched controls underwent two randomized, cross-over trials with intra-dermal injections of capsaicin or a saline placebo in the forearm and foot. Outcome measures included spontaneous pain level, surface area of punctate hyperalgesia, surface area of dynamic allodynia, cutaneous blood flow, regional skin temperature and vital signs. Results. VVS cases experienced greater spontaneous pain, punctate hyperalgesia and dynamic allodynia than pain-free controls. Within the VVS group, post-capsaicin spontaneous pain, punctate hyperalgesia and dynamic allodynia were similar in the forearm and foot. Post-capsaicin blood flow did not differ between cases and controls by anatomic site. Measures of depression and anxiety correlated with spontaneous pain intensity but did not correlate with measures of hyperalgesia, allodynia, or blood flow. VVS cases had higher resting pulse rates and lower resting systolic blood pressures than in controls. Conclusion. VVS patients show enhancement of post-capsaicin pain response extending far beyond the anatomic location of the primary complaint.
Pain 2005 Sep
PMID:Effects of intradermal foot and forearm capsaicin injections in normal and vulvodynia-afflicted women. 1608 95

The aim of the study was to investigate the prevalence of vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) in a sample of women suffering from lifelong vaginismus (N=91). Lifelong vaginismus is defined as "having a history of never having been able to experience penile entry of the vagina". The results with respect to VVS are compared with the results of women who are suffering from pain during intercourse (superficial dyspareunia) (N=84). Both patients groups were recruited from two treatment outcome studies. Using a standard physical examination, erythema was found in 77%, pain "on touch" in 69% and erythema and pain on the same location was seen in 56% of the patients with lifelong vaginismus. Furthermore, it was found that erythema (94%), pain (98%) and erythema and pain on the same location (92%) were more frequently found in patients with dyspareunia compared to women with lifelong vaginismus. It is concluded that pain is an integral part of the experiences in the majority of women with lifelong vaginismus.
...
PMID:Vulvar vestibulitis syndrome: an important factor in the evaluation of lifelong vaginismus? 1645 19

The results of this prospective open clinical trial (N = 76) indicate that a cognitive-behavioral group program for women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS) affects sexuality, pain control, vaginal muscle control, and vestibular pain and that these changes may mediate changes in pain during intercourse. Improvements in sexual functioning and vestibular pain during treatment seem to be particularly important factors in determining short and longer term treatment outcome. These findings are consistent with a cognitive-behavioral conceptualization of VVS.
...
PMID:A cognitive-behavioral group program for women with vulvar vestibulitis syndrome (VVS): factors associated with treatment success. 1680 49


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Next >>