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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In order to establish the current treatment of cyclical
mastalgia
, a postal questionnaire was sent to 276 consultant general surgeons (over 25% of the UK total), randomly selected from the 12 UK regional health authorities. Surgeons were questioned about their choices of treatment for cyclical
mastalgia
, after initial resassurance, and for persistent pain. Two hundred and forty-five (89%) responded, out of whom 219 saw patients with breast disease. Twenty-three (11%) of these surgeons were identified as having a major interest in breast disease. Danazol, used by 75% of surgeons, was the drug most commonly prescribed. Initial treatments by non-specialist surgeons included danazol (31%),
analgesia
(19%) and diuretics (17%), and by breast surgeons evening primrose oil (30%), tamoxifen (13%) and vitamin B6 (13%). For persistent pain 46% of non-specialist surgeons prescribed danazol and 18% surgery, whereas 65% of breast surgeons prescribed danazol and 30% bromocriptine. A wide variety of therapies are used, but danazol is the most common. For persistent unresponsive pain, local excision biopsy surgery is frequently considered by non-specialist surgeons. Breast specialist tend initially to use other methods that are associated with fewer side-effects and reserve other treatments such as danazol and bromocriptine for persistent cases.
...
PMID:Management of cyclical mastalgia. 228 96
The most important factors in the evaluation and treatment of breast pain consist of a thorough history, physical, and radiologic evaluation. These can be used to reassure the patient that she does not have breast cancer. In the 15% of
mastalgia
patients who have life-altering pain and still request treatment, therapy may consist of a well-fitting bra, a decrease in dietary fat intake, and discontinuance of oral contraceptives or hormone replacement therapy. Those women still resistant to therapy may experience relief from evening primrose oil supplements, bromocriptine, tamoxifen, or GnRH analogues. Predicting which treatment will be most useful for any particular woman may be challenging. No differences in success rates were found to be associated with factors such as reproductive history, presenting complaint, personal or family history of breast disease, or subsequent need for breast surgery. The peak (but not basal) serum prolactin levels in response to thyrotropin releasing hormone stimulus has been predictive of success for hormonal treatment but is relatively invasive. A survey of treatments actually used was obtained from 276 consultant surgeons in Britain in 1990. Of those, 75% prescribed danazol. Others used
analgesia
(21%), diuretics (18%), local excision (18%), bromocriptine (15%), evening primrose oil (13%), tamoxifen (9%), a well-fitting bra (3%), and no treatment (10%). Breast specialists were more likely to begin treatment with primrose oil, tamoxifen, vitamin B6, and
analgesia
, reserving other hormonal therapies for more difficult cases. To further evaluate the women who have severe
mastalgia
but do not complete treatment regimens, a questionnaire was sent to 79 patients who failed to return to the Longmore Breast Unit of Western General Hospital, Edinburgh. Seventy-one women responded. Of these, 36 said they felt better, 19 said they felt no more could be done, 18 learned to live with it, 14 were not worried even if the pain recurred, 2 were pregnant, 10 were postmenopausal, and 5 were still taking the medications previously prescribed. The prognosis for women with breast pain is not always predictable. Women with cyclic breast pain often are relieved by events that alter their hormonal milieu, whereas noncyclic breast pain may last only 1 to 2 years. Sitruk-Ware and colleagues conducted a study of French women with fibroadenomas. They found an association between fibroadenomas and cyclic
mastalgia
occurring more than 1 year prior to the first full-term pregnancy. A retrospective, case-control study to determine if cyclic
mastalgia
was a risk factor for breast cancer was conducted on 210 newly diagnosed women with breast cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mastodynia. 781 7