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

Diurnal rhythm of plasma cortisol, of psychological state, and of pain was measured for two days in 25 migraine patients and eight control subjects. Fourteen of the migraine patients and none of the controls displayed either consistently high plasma cortisol or an occasional aberrant peak. Abnormal psychological findings, particularly depression, were found in the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory only in migraine patients with abnormal plasma cortisol levels. Neither psychological abnormality nor pain seemed the single cause of elevation of plasma cortisol.
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PMID:Circadian rhythms of plasma cortisol in migraine. 57 80

One hundred and twenty patients (64 men and 56 women, aged 19 to 63) with chronic pyelonephritis were subdivided into two groups: a control group of 30 subjects and an experimental one of 90 subjects. Experimental subjects underwent short wave therapy (460 MHz, 50-60 W, for 8-20 minutes) in the lumbar area. Lumbosacral pain disappeared in 87 out of 90, subjects, intercostal pain in 20 out of 28, headache mitigated in 40 out of 53, asthenia was markedly reduced in 49 out of 50. Systolic and diastolic hypertension was reduced, as well as the Kakorski-Addis count in urine. Diurnal diuresis and lysozyme increased, while IgG, IgA and IgM were reduced.
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PMID:[Effects of short-wave therapy in patients with chronic pyelonephritis]. 183 63

Transitory eye pain occurred during sleep in a 62 year-old patient, who complained of being often awoken during the second half of the night. Diurnal ophthalmologic examinations did not reveal any abnormality. Three consecutive nocturnal polysomnographic recordings were performed to determine whether these pain crises were related to any sleep stage. The patient woke up three times during the recordings because of the usual pain occurrence. On the three occasions, the crisis occurred during of immediately after a REM sleep phase. The brievity of the pain episode (4 to 5 min) did not allow a quick eye pressure measurement to demonstrate a possible increase in ocular tension. However, the role of the REM sleep myosis and vegetative manifestations are discussed regarding the determination of eye pain.
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PMID:[Transitory eye pain during sleep]. 221 9

Radial keratotomy for myopia and transverse keratotomy for astigmatism are the most commonly performed refractive surgical procedures. A decade of experience with modern techniques has produced considerable literature on the complications of keratotomy. Vision-threatening complications (bacterial keratitis, traumatic rupture of the globe through weakened keratotomy scars, endophthalmitis, cataract formation from surgical trauma to the lens) are quite rare, occurring in less than 1% of eyes in published series. The most common side effects affect most patients in the first few months after surgery: pain for 24 to 48 hours, transient glare and light sensitivity, and fluctuating visual acuity. The most common persistent complications are overcorrection and undercorrection. Persistent irregular astigmatism occurs in almost all cases in the region of the incision scars, but it is rarely severe enough to reduce spectacle acuity. Most individuals have mild glare, but this is rarely disabling. Diurnal variation of refraction in visual acuity occurs commonly, but the magnitude of the fluctuation is seldom enough to require multiple pairs of spectacles. Longterm refractive stability occurs in approximately half of eyes by six months, but approximately one in four eyes will experience continued change over six months to four years. Complications, such as scarring from intersecting keratotomy incisions, irregular astigmatism resulting from multiple reoperations, and overcorrections with the attendant early onset of symptomatic presbyopia are becoming much less frequent.
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PMID:Complications of radial and transverse keratotomy. 268 58

Diurnal sleep-wake patterns in the normal and the adjuvant arthritic rat were measured during the first 3 h of both light and dark periods. During the hours of maximal sleep in the normal rat, arthritic rats showed a significant increase in wakefulness (Wake), a shift to non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) stages with lower amplitudes (LS and HS1), and a large reduction of NREM sleep with the highest-amplitude (HS2) and paradoxical sleep. Arthritic rats also showed marked sleep fragmentation manifested by more episodes of Wake, LS, and HS1 and shorter episodes of HS2 during both the light and the dark periods. Thus, arthritic rats cannot sustain long periods of sleep. In contrast to control rats, arthritic rats lacked a diurnal variation in Wake, total sleep, and electroencephalographic (EEG) delta activity. They also showed a decrease in overall EEG amplitude. In addition, there was a positive correlation between the severity of arthritis and the percentages of NREM sleep with low (LS) and moderate (HS1) amplitude. Thus, the decline in EEG amplitude could indicate a deficit of EEG generating mechanisms or some aspect of disease severity, such as pain.
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PMID:Decreased slow-wave and paradoxical sleep in a rat chronic pain model. 271 Oct 92

The pattern and frequency of neurovegetative symptoms was studied in 57 patients with chronic pain. Seventy-nine percent of these patients had a diagnosable depressive illness, but endogenous depression was rare (5%). Patients with chronic pain were divided into major depressives, minor/intermittent depressives and patients with no depression. A control group of nonendogenous major depressives without pain was also utilized. Major depressives differed from the other two chronic pain groups in that there was more frequent or severe early waking, weight loss, anorexia, diminished libido and initial insomnia. Diurnal variation of mood was not a characteristic of major depression with chronic pain, and did not differ in frequency from the other two chronic pain groups. Major depressives exhibited a profile of neurovegetative symptoms very similar to that found in the control group of major depressives. Over one-third of minor/intermittent depressed patients with chronic pain exhibited atypical (reversed) vegetative symptoms of hyperphagia and weight gain. This finding, together with our review of the literature, suggests an important and previously unrecognized link between atypical depression and chronic pain.
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PMID:Neurovegetative symptoms in chronic pain and depression. 293 54

Obstructive apnea (asphyxia) is accompanied by acute elevation of systemic blood pressure. The usual nocturnal fall in blood pressure seen during sleep in normals may be absent in patients with repetitive apneas, and daytime systemic hypertension is reported to occur in up to 90% of such patients. Increased sympathetic activity in response to repetitive nocturnal episodes of asphyxia could explain the reversal of the diurnal pressure variation but not the daytime systemic hypertension in this setting. We examined diurnal variation in urinary catecholamines in eight subjects with severe apnea before and after tracheostomy. Five obese hypertensive subjects without apnea served as controls. Three urine specimens, two awake (7 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 3 p.m. to 11 p.m.) and one asleep (11 p.m. to 7 a.m.) were collected preoperatively and again 10-14 days postoperatively when the patient was free of pain and signs of stoma infection. All specimens were analyzed for epinephrine, norepineprine, metanephrine, and normetanephrine by liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. Urinary epinephrine and metanephrine were not different between subjects and controls. Norepinephrine and normetanephrine were significantly higher in apneic subjects pretracheostomy as compared either with controls or with their own values posttracheostomy. Diurnal variation was not seen before or after tracheostomy. Only two of the controls showed significant diurnal variation in norepinephrine. We conclude that the absence of diurnal variation in catecholamines prior to tracheostomy reflects increased nocturnal sympathetic activity. Elevation of daytime norepinephrine and normetanephrine with return to control levels following tracheostomy implies increased sympathetic activity throughout the day.
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PMID:Urinary catecholamines before and after tracheostomy in patients with obstructive sleep apnea and hypertension. 356 46

The hour of day of primary ventricular tachycardia (VT) in the acute phase of myocardial infarction was studied in 63 consecutive patients without cardiac failure or antiarrhythmic therapy, admitted to hospital less than 6 hours after the onset of chest pain. There were 19 women and 44 men, with an average age of 63 years. The site of infarction was anterior in 23 cases, posterior in 34 cases and circumferential in 6 cases. The cardiac rhythm was analysed from the 6th hour following the onset of chest pain for 4 days, using a HP 98220 A computerised analyser CPK levels were measured daily. Ventricular tachycardia occurred in 73% of cases with no significant difference between daytime (18 patients) and night time (28 patients). The patients developing VT did not differ from the remainder with respect to age, sex, or site of ECG changes, but peak CPK levels were significantly higher than in patients without VT. The risk of VT decreased slowly as the interval from the onset of chest pain increased and fell practically to zero after the 40th hour. Diurnal and nocturnal VT were independent of age, sex or site of infarct. However, nocturnal VT correlated independently of the time of onset of chest pain to high values of CPK. There was no difference with respect to age, sex, location of infarct or incidence of ventricular tachycardia between infarcts with pain starting during the day, and infarcts with pain starting at night. However, when the pain started during the day, the peak CPK was significantly higher and there were significantly more attacks of nocturnal ventricular tachycardia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Time of occurrence of primary ventricular tachycardia in the acute phase of myocardial infarction]. 643 67

Rats maintained on a 12-hour light-dark cycle were tested for pain sensitivity after being deprived of food during either the dark or the light phase of the cycle. Diurnal fluctuations in pain sensitivity were observed. The fluctuations followed food intake patterns rather than a natural circadian rhythm, with food deprivation producing a decrease in pain sensitivity. The analgesic response produced by this mild food deprivation was strongly attenuated by naloxone or feeding, suggesting that endogenous opioid systems may be related to patterns of food intake.
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PMID:Mediation of diurnal fluctuations in pain sensitivity in the rat by food intake patterns: reversal by naloxone. 719 Nov 43

Diurnal variation in nociceptive sensitivity and plasma immunoreactive beta-endorphin (ir-BEND) concentrations was examined in eight healthy Thoroughbred horses. Pain thresholds, ir-BEND concentrations, rectal temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate and pupil diameter were measured over a 24 hour period. Nociceptive sensitivity was determined using two objective measures of pain: the skin-twitch reflex latency and the hoof withdrawal reflex latency. Significant variation in both nociceptive thresholds and ir-BEND concentrations were noted over the 24 hour period, with elevated pain thresholds observed at 0900 hours and smaller secondary peaks at 1500 hours. Immunoreactive beta-endorphin concentrations were also elevated at 0900 hours. Cardiac rate was high and pupil diameter was largest at 0900 hours. These physiologic changes, along with increased pain threshold, mimic the observed effects of morphine and other mu-agonists in the horse. The results of this study suggest that endogenous opioid peptides may modulate pain threshold as well as other physiologic parameters in the horse.
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PMID:Diurnal variation in plasma ir-beta-endorphin levels and experimental pain thresholds in the horse. 851 86


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