Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (pelvic pain)
4,056 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although there is increasing awareness of the short-term psychological and social adaptations to childhood sexual abuse, little is known about the long-term effects of such abuse, particularly its effect on subsequent medical utilization and the experience and reporting of physical symptoms. We re-analyzed data from a previous study of 100 women scheduled for diagnostic laparoscopy (50 for chronic pain, 50 for tubal ligation or infertility evaluation) who received structured, physician-administered psychiatric and sexual abuse interviews. Women were regrouped by severity of childhood sexual abuse, and we compared the groups with respect to lifetime psychiatric diagnoses and medically unexplained symptom patterns. Unadjusted odds ratios showed that risk for lifetime diagnoses of major depression, panic disorder, phobia, somatization disorder and drug abuse, and current diagnoses of major depression and somatoform pain disorder were significantly higher in the severely abused group compared with women with no abuse or less severe abuse. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that number of somatization symptoms, lifetime panic disorder and drug dependence were predictive of a prior history of severe childhood sexual abuse. Psychiatric disorders and medical symptoms, particularly chronic pelvic pain, are common in women with histories of severe childhood sexual abuse. Clinicians should inquire about childhood sexual and physical abuse experiences in patients with multiple medical and psychiatric symptoms, particularly patients with chronic pelvic pain.
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PMID:Medical and psychiatric symptoms in women with childhood sexual abuse. 145 59

Many studies in developed countries show a high frequency of psychological distress among women attending gynecology clinics. The aim of this study is to assess the prevalence of psychiatric morbidity among 239 women attending a gynecology clinic at Ilorin Maternity Hospital in Nigeria. The aim also was to test the validity of using the 30-item version of the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-30) as a screening tool. Clinical diagnoses were recorded according to the International Classification of Diseases-Ninth Edition (ICD-9). Psychiatric morbidity was determined according to the method of Deshpande. Literate respondents used a self-administered GHQ-30 and illiterate respondents were interviewed with the GHQ-30. The psychiatric interview was conducted by a research psychiatrist. Patients were grouped into 1) patients with symptoms diagnoses according to ICD-9, 2) cases with subdiagnostic syndromes, and 3) patients without significant psychiatric symptoms. A basic demographic profile of patients is given. Obstetrics and gynecologic data reveal that 31.3% were nulliparous, 44.5% had between 1 and 4 children, and 24.5% had 5-8 children. 64.4% reported regular menses, 21.9% reported scanty menstrual flow, and 64.4% had a normal flow. 17/6% reported a history of induced abortion, and 43.4% reported previous spontaneous abortion. 23.6% had primary infertility and 28.3% had secondary infertility; infertility was the most common complaint. A score of 5 or higher on the GHQ-30 indicated a psychiatric case. 35/2% were found to suffer from definite psychiatric morbidity. An additional 6.4% had severe psychiatric symptoms. Of the psychiatric diagnoses, 34.1% were for neurotic depression, 24.4% for anxiety, 25.7% for adjustment reaction, 12.2% manic depressive psychosis (depressed type), 2.4% phobic state, and 1.2% schizophrenia. Psychiatric morbidity was found to be unrelated to age, marital status, religion, education, occupational group, or duration of marriage. Symptoms such as irregular menses, pelvic pain, ad having no children were factors significantly associated with psychiatric morbidity; this pattern is supported in the developed country literature. Policy should be directed to a preventive and biopsychosocial model of health care.
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PMID:Psychiatric morbidity in a gynaecology clinic in Nigeria. 161 88