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Query: UMLS:C0030794 (
pelvic pain
)
4,056
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The history of physical and sexual abuse in childhood and adulthood was assessed in 31 women with chronic
pelvic pain
, 142 women with chronic pain in other locations, and 32 controls. Thirty-nine percent of patients with chronic
pelvic pain
had been physically abused in childhood. This percentage was significantly greater than that observed in other chronic-pain patients (18.4%) or controls (9.4%), though the prevalence of childhood sexual abuse did not differ among the groups (19.4, 16.3, and 12.5%, respectively).
Abuse
in adulthood was less common and was not significantly more likely to have occurred in patients with chronic
pelvic pain
than in other chronic-pain patients or controls. These data suggest that
pelvic pain
is unlikely to be specifically and psychodynamically related to sexual abuse but that the pernicious nature of abuse, whether physical or sexual, may promote the chronicity of painful conditions.
...
PMID:History of physical and sexual abuse in women with chronic pelvic pain. 235 71
This study examines the incidence of sexual and physical abuse and its relationship to selected pain description and psychological variables in a sample of 36 chronic
pelvic pain
patients.
Abuse
was measured on a 6-item reliable scale, and abused and non-abused respondents were compared on 4 categories of variables expected to be related to the effects of abuse (pain description, functional impact of pain, other's response to pain, and psychosocial impact of pain). Results indicated that 19 of 36 patients reported prior abuse. Physical abuse was reported less commonly than sexual abuse. No differences between the abused and non-abused groups were noted on demographic, pain description, or the functional interference variables. On the psychological variables, however, the abused group reported less perceived life control, greater punishing responses to pain, and higher levels of somatization and global distress than the non-abused group. These results indicate a high incidence of sexual abuse in patients with chronic
pelvic pain
and suggest that abused and non-abused patients differ on psychological but not pain description or self-reported functional interference variables.
...
PMID:Relationship of sexual and physical abuse to pain and psychological assessment variables in chronic pelvic pain patients. 802 29
A selective literature review of dissociation in women abuse survivors was under-taken from a feminist, constructivist perspective. Dissociation has been conceptualized many ways historically. Current understandings of dissociative phenomena are diverse, as reflected in the research and treatment literature. Dissociation has been linked to physical and psychological problems, including major mental illnesses,
pelvic pain
, somatization disorders, and eating disorders. There has been a preoccupation with rare but fascinating extremes of dissociation, such as multiple personality disorder, with less emphasis on more frequently seen types of dissociation, such as depersonalization and derealization. Views of dissociation as it occurs in women child abuse survivors affect their autonomy and perceived credibility and determine treatment trajectories. Questions remain as to what aspects and types of dissociation are "pathological." There is evidence that dissociation may be a commonplace human experience in the general population. Implications for theory, research, and practice are included.
Trauma Violence
Abuse
2003 Oct
PMID:Dissociative experiences of women child abuse survivors: a selective constructivist review. 1500 98