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1.
Curr Pain Headache Rep ; 22(3): 22, 2018 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29541938

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The complicated nature of chronic pain involves an interplay between psychological and physical factors, often resulting in increased emotional distress and reduced quality of life. This review is designed to help the medical practitioner who is working with chronic pain patients to be aware of psychological assessment techniques that can add to comprehensive patient understanding and more effectively guide treatment. Enhanced ability to assess and understand the emotional life of the chronic pain patient provides a basis for intervening and treating more successfully. RECENT FINDINGS: There are a broad range of assessment techniques, some of which require a background in psychology and some that do not, that can identify psychological differences in chronic pain patients and serve to guide intervention strategies. Chronic pain is often comorbid with depression, anxiety, catastrophizing, and various ineffective coping strategies. Some patients, however, have demonstrated more adaptive and effective strategies for cognitively and behaviorally coping with pain and normalizing their lives. Proper assessment enables the individualization of treatment to overcome and/or build upon each patient's psychological frame of mind to maximize the potential for effective functioning. The use of standardized and documented psychological assessment techniques can lead to a better understanding of chronic pain patients and contribute in ways that can enhance response to medical treatment and improve quality of life. It is recommended that certain psychological tools be included to supplement the medical assessment of patients who have chronic pain. A basic assessment can include a short psychological-based clinical interview along with brief measures of depression, anxiety, and coping strategies. It is also recommended that the pain physician have access to professional psychological practitioners as a resource for more complicated assessments and psychological intervention services.


Subject(s)
Chronic Pain/psychology , Chronic Pain/therapy , Pain Management/methods , Humans
2.
Curr Pain Headache Rep ; 19(9): 43, 2015 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26209170

ABSTRACT

Chronic pain is a complex disorder to which medical and psychological factors both contribute and react. While there are numerous chronic pain conditions, they share certain experiences. This review examines some of the psychological factors that are common to the pain experience and some of the psychologically-based treatments that have been utilized in conduction with medical treatments for pain. In light of the fact that there is not yet a "gold standard" in this regard, it ends with the challenge to develop coherent and effective multi-model treatments that draw upon the successes that have been demonstrated so far.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/therapy , Biofeedback, Psychology , Chronic Pain/rehabilitation , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Depression/therapy , Mindfulness , Psychotherapy , Activities of Daily Living , Anxiety/epidemiology , Catastrophization/psychology , Chronic Pain/psychology , Chronic Pain/therapy , Depression/epidemiology , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Social Stigma , Social Support , Treatment Outcome , United States/epidemiology
3.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 78(6): 600-4, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17056632

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To characterise the clinical features of non-familial migraine with unilateral motor symptoms (MUMS) and compare these features with those of migraine without weakness. METHODS: 24 patients with MUMS and 48 matched controls were identified from a tertiary care headache centre. Using a structured interview, the migraine symptoms of both groups were characterised. Results of previously administered Beck Depression Inventories (BDI), Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventories and psychiatric diagnoses were collected, when available, and compared between groups. RESULTS: 9 patients had episodic migraine and 15 had chronic migraine. Patients with MUMS always had weakness involving the arm subjectively, and both arm and leg objectively. A give-way character was always present. Only 17% of patients with MUMS reported facial weakness; 58% reported persistent interictal weakness; 92% reported sensory symptoms. A rostrocaudal march of sensory and motor symptoms was frequently reported. Weakness was ipsilateral to unilateral headache in two thirds of the patients. Compared with controls, patients with MUMS had had similar pain intensities, but were more likely to report other migrainous symptoms, including allodynia. 38% of patients with MUMS were told they had had a stroke, and 17% believed they had had a stroke despite normal brain imaging. Patients with MUMS reported fewer affective disorders and more adjustment disorders than controls, and had similar BDI scores. CONCLUSIONS: A syndrome of severe migraine with accompanying give-way weakness is common in tertiary care headache centres. It is accompanied by other neurological symptoms.


Subject(s)
Migraine Disorders/complications , Paresis/etiology , Adult , Attitude to Health , Case-Control Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/complications , Middle Aged
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