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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (
pruritus
)
14,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In recent years there has been a commendable focus on patient-centred medicine, with increasing attention being paid to the timely assessment and management of acute pain. 78% of patients who attend the emergency department report pain, the severity of which is often used to determine clinical priority at triage. Clinical guidelines are increasingly including the timely provision of appropriate analgesia as a clinical standard. Pain scoring has been widely adopted, causing pain to be considered as the 'fifth vital sign' by some. Interestingly, there remains little evidence to support the benefit of this approach for patients. The aim of this review is to explore some of the assumptions that made in defining and addressing 'pain', and to explore whether it is truly 'nociception' or 'suffering' that ought to be addressed. Through two thought experiments, it is demonstrated that the current approach to pain relies heavily on addressing 'nociception' but does little to address the 'suffering' that is undoubtedly they key determinant of well-being in patients. It is demonstrated that the current naturalistic approach risks neglecting many 'non-nociceptive' sources of suffering, including physical (eg, nausea,
vertigo
, dyspnoea,
pruritus
) and mental (anxiety, depression, fear, anger) symptoms. In the humane quest to relieve suffering, there is a clear need to examine current practice. Indeed, the philosophical enquiry presented even questions whether our culture risks overemphasising the importance of pharmacological analgesia and calls for emergency physicians to take a more holistic approach to meeting patient needs.
...
PMID:Optimising well-being: is it the pain or the hurt that matters? 2251 56
It is widely accepted that Shakespeare was unique in the range of his insights into the human mind, but the way his characters reveal their mental states through bodily sensations has not been systematically explored. The author has searched for these phenomena in the 42 major works of Shakespeare and in 46 genre-matched works by his contemporaries, and in this paper the author focuses on sensory changes other than those involving vision, taste, the heart and the alimentary tract (all considered in other papers).
Vertigo
is experienced by five distressed Shakespearean characters, all men, but not at all by the other writers' characters. Breathlessness, probably representing hyperventilation, occurs eleven times in Shakespeare's works but only twice in the other writers' works. Fatigue, expressing grief, is articulated by several Shakespearean characters including Hamlet. It features less often in the others' works. Deafness at a time of high emotion is mentioned by Shakespeare several times but usually by a character 'turning a deaf ear', consciously or unconsciously. To the other writers, ears show emotion only by burning or
itching
. Blunting of touch and pain and their opposites of hypersensitivity to touch and pain are all to be found in Shakespeare's works when a character is distressed or excited, but not so with his contemporaries' works. Faint feelings and cold feelings are also more common in the works of Shakespeare. Overall, therefore, Shakespeare was exceptional in his use of sensory disturbances to express emotional upset. This may be a conscious literary device or a sign of exceptional awareness of bodily sensations.
...
PMID:Body-conscious Shakespeare: sensory disturbances in troubled characters. 2167 16
Recurrent dislocation of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disk is caused by many factors. Dislocation can result in an acute or chronic closed lock condition. Temporomandibular joint dysfunction is often presented with otalgia symptoms. Other aural symptoms such as deafness, tinnitus, pressure/blockage, and
vertigo
are also commonly presented together with TMJ dysfunction (Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci. 1980;5:23-36). However,
pruritus
associated with TMJ dysfunction in the inner ear has never been reported in the literature. We report a case history of TMJ dysfunction and associated inner ear
pruritus
, which are both resolved by eminectomy.
...
PMID:Temporomandibular joint disorder and inner ear pruritus: resolution by eminectomy. 2507 71
"Cutis Marmorata" skin symptoms after diving, most frequently in the form of an
itching
or painful cutaneous red-bluish discoloration are commonly regarded as a mild form of decompression sickness (DCS), and treated with oxygen inhalation without reverting to hyperbaric recompression treatment. It has been observed that the occurrence of Cutis Marmorata is frequently associated with the presence of a Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO) of the heart, and indeed, with a properly executed contrast echocardiographic technique, these patients have an almost 100% prevalence of PFO. Only occasionally, Cutis Marmorata is accompanied by other symptoms of DCS. These symptoms usually are in the form of visual distortions,
vertigo
, or mild, vague but generalized cerebral dysfunction (such as abnormal fatigue, clumsiness, concentration problems). The pathogenesis of these other manifestations is clearly emboligenic, and we hypothesize that Cutis Marmorata is also a manifestation of gas bubbles embolizing the brain stem: the site of autonomic nervous system regulation of skin blood vessel dilation and constriction. The consequences of this hypothesis are that Cutis Marmorata skin decompression sickness should no longer be considered a mild, innocuous form but rather a serious, neurological form and treated accordingly.
...
PMID:Cutis Marmorata skin decompression sickness is a manifestation of brainstem bubble embolization, not of local skin bubbles. 2643 31
In a prospective, observational study between April and November 2017 we evaluated the correlation between temporomandibular disorder (TMD), and otological signs and other symptoms in a sample of 251 patients. First, a simplified anamnestic questionnaire was applied for the diagnosis of TMD and the following symptoms were recorded: otalgia, tinnitus,
vertigo
,
pruritus
of the ear, feeling of hearing loss, fullness in the ear, headache, pain in the eye, neck pain, back pain, and dizziness. Some degree of TMD was detected in 177 of the participants (70.5%). Among the otological symptoms studied, significant associations were found with tinnitus (<0.001), ear pain (<0.001), feeling of hearing loss (<0.001), and
vertigo
(<0.001). There were also significant associations with non-otological symptoms, the most common being back pain (<0.001), headache (<0.001), neck pain (<0.001), pain in the eye (<0.001), and dizziness (0.001). Our findings show that the higher incidence of both otological and non-otological symptoms was associated with a progressive increase in the severity of TMD.
...
PMID:Otological findings and other symptoms related to temporomandibular disorders in young people. 3012 50
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