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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although patients with medically unexplained chronic pain are sometimes referred for psychiatric consultation, it is rare for them to be recommended for a psychoanalytically informed treatment. Moreover, because they experience their distress as primarily physical, it is difficult to engage such patients in psychoanalysis. Nonetheless, the psychoanalytic understanding of conversion symptom formation, and of how childhood trauma and adverse attachment experiences impact on the mind-brain-body-complex, can be integrated with the current neuromatrix theory of pain and thereby offer a comprehensive theoretical model and guide for the psychoanalytic treatment of some patients with chronic pain syndromes. The author illustrates this approach by reporting the analysis of a patient with chronic pelvic pain who had obtained no relief from a host of medical and psychiatric therapies. The analytic process of linking the pain with emotional trauma and pathologic internal object relations, and thereby symbolizing the pain, allowed the patient to discover multiple meanings for the symptom and make important life changes as the pain subsided.
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PMID:The challenge of chronic pain: a psychoanalytic approach. 1839 46

Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) in women is defined as noncyclical and persistent pain lasting more than six months perceived to be related to the pelvis. There are many etiologies that can cause CPP, including gynecologic, urologic, gastrointestinal, musculoskeletal, neurologic, and psychosocial. There is a strong association between psychological factors and CPP. It has been noted that almost half of women being treated for CPP report a history of sexual, physical, or emotional trauma. Women with CPP have been noted to have higher rates of psychological disorders in comparison to their peers. For men, the most common etiology for CPP is chronic prostatitis and there are also correlations with psychological disorders. There are many different treatment options for CPP: surgical, pharmacological, and non-pharmacological (alternative therapies). Cognitive-behavioral therapy may be another option when treating chronic pelvic pain syndrome and should be considered.
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PMID:Cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of chronic pelvic pain. 3300 56