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PedAM

Pediatric Disease Annotations & Medicines




Disease dementia
Symptom C0030193|pain
Sentences 53
PubMedID- 25641376 The intense pain and symptoms of individuals with dementia was alleviated less often than those of individuals with cancer (odds ratio (or) = 0.50, p < .001), and individuals with dementia were more likely to have life-prolonging treatment withheld or withdrawn (or = 1.40, p = .048).
PubMedID- 23235184 The cause of the difficulty in the assessment of pain was due to dementia in two cases, mental retardation in one case, the patient's personality in another case, and the patient's believing in a third case.
PubMedID- 25879681 An important problem encountered in the assessment of pain in patients with dementia, especially in more advanced stages, is that assessment often is based on observation and interpretation of behavior, for which the validity is unequivocally established .
PubMedID- 26338172 These findings may indicate under-reporting and under-detection of pain in persons with dementia, and subsequent suboptimal treatment.
PubMedID- 22655002 The nurses clearly expressed that pain communication with dementia patients was difficult to manage.
PubMedID- 24520876 Background: the evidence of undertreatment of pain in patients with dementia is inconsistent.
PubMedID- 21904200 Objectives: pain assessment in patients with dementia and severe limitations in ability to communicate can be challenging.
PubMedID- 20146915 dementia has been associated with disturbed pain processing and an impaired ability to provide self-reported ratings on pain.
PubMedID- 25788560 Paradoxically, we found an attenuated stimulus-response function, compared to controls, suggesting that ad dementia interferes with pain ratings over time, most likely due to memory impairment.
PubMedID- 25519741 Accurate assessment of pain in people with dementia is challenging and pain assessment tools have received considerable attention over the years, with an increasing number of tools made available.
PubMedID- 22119317 What does an increased prevalence of behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia in individuals with pain mean.
PubMedID- 20882781 The assessment and management of pain in people with dementia in care homes.
PubMedID- 22676380 The most significant barrier was a patient’s inability to report pain owing to dementia, delirium, and depression .
PubMedID- 22487749 Assessment scales to identify pain in people with dementia have been highlighted in recent studies, but there is little evidence for consistency between these tools.
PubMedID- 26579217 Since the current study was part of a larger study on pain in people with and without dementia, the thermal stimulation protocol used in this study was a modification of the experimental mechanical pressure pain protocol used successfully by cole and colleagues to examine psychophysical responses and brain activations in people with alzheimer’s disease .
PubMedID- 22723810 Post-operative pain management practices in patients with dementia - the current situation in finland.
PubMedID- 25928621 Due to the challenges in the assessment and management of pain , people with dementia and nps are more likely to receive antipsychotic drugs, despite the adverse side-effects like falls, somnolence and even death .
PubMedID- 21359040 Recommendations: we encourage the ongoing and regular evidence-based pain assessment of older persons with dementia, using standardized procedures.
PubMedID- 23348866 The majority of respondents recognised the difficulty of assessing pain in people with dementia; however, younger pharmacists (p = 0.041) and pharmacists who provided pharmaceutical care to people with dementia (p = 0.012) were more likely to be aware of the pain assessment tools for use in people with dementia.
PubMedID- 21559185 The risk that you may incur, then, rather than an overestimation of pain in patients with dementia is the underestimation of the symptom in older cognitively compromised patients.
PubMedID- 25231805 Conclusion: the findings of this study demonstrate that pacslac-k is useful in assessing pain for elders with dementia living in long-term care facilities.
PubMedID- 26508255 Tools have been developed to enhance self-reporting of pain by people with dementia and the objective observation of non-verbal signs of pain.
PubMedID- 22004045 We therefore used data from a community study of pain in people with dementia that used the cohen mansfield agitation inventory (cmai) .
PubMedID- 25790457 We aimed to investigate the prevalence of pain in people with dementia admitted to general hospitals and explore the association between pain and behavioural and psychiatric symptoms of dementia (bpsd).
PubMedID- 24401151 Objective: it has been documented that pain in people with dementia is often under-reported and poorly detected.
PubMedID- 24866636 An observational checklist is helping nurses to assess pain in patients with dementia who struggle to speak.
PubMedID- 23453467 The results of this study highlight the complexity of pain relief in patients with dementia at the end of life from a nursing perspective.
PubMedID- 25107934 Conclusion: participant-reported pain in individuals with dementia appears to be a unique construct for which other psychosocial indicators cannot be substituted.
PubMedID- 22290520 Respondents demonstrated good knowledge about pain in residents with dementia and acknowledged the difficulties surrounding accurate pain assessment.
PubMedID- 23745641 Certified nursing assistants' perception of pain in people with dementia: a hermeneutic enquiry in dementia care practice.
PubMedID- 24625010 Unrelieved pain in residents with dementia may lead to fear of movement, resistance to care, anxiety, and agitated behavior 6.
PubMedID- 23090177 The evaluation and measurement of pain in individuals with dementia and unable to communicate verbally has been a challenging experience.
PubMedID- 26363705 Using sense-making theory to aid understanding of the recognition, assessment and management of pain in patients with dementia in acute hospital settings.
PubMedID- 25736822 Advanced dementia was associated with more pain only.
PubMedID- 21592246 The major predictors for pain in residents with dementia included restraint, assisted bathing and assisted transfer.
PubMedID- 24020433 However, among residents who reported current pain, those with a dementia diagnosis reported greater pain intensity (based on a 0-10 numeric rating scale) than did those without dementia (median 8.0 vs 6.0, respectively; p = 0.010).
PubMedID- 21932148 Recent literature demonstrates that pain in patients with dementia is often undertreated.
PubMedID- 25239018 Conclusion: greater attention to pain in patients with dementia may be a potential solution to some of the quality problems and high costs of care in snfs.
PubMedID- 23937891 Because there is no evidence that pain among people with dementia produces any particular signs or behaviours that are unique , tools such as the disability distress assessment tool may be useful , alongside pain-specific tools like doloplus2 .
PubMedID- 23506621 Cancer pain in people with dementia is of particular concern because of communication problems that occur with worsening disease.
PubMedID- 20170535 The patients in the present sample had reduced cognitive function, reduced verbal capacity, changes in pain experience due to dementia and received medication that could influence their behaviour (e.g.
PubMedID- 24799157 This is of key importance because a central step to ensure improved pain management in patients with dementia is the ability of a pain tool to capture the effect of pain treatment over time.
PubMedID- 24204133 Assessment of pain in people with dementia is particularly challenging due to the loss of communication ability inherent in the symptomology of the condition, which limits the subjective reporting of pain that would normally be expected with cognitively healthy adults.
PubMedID- 23330944 Suspected pain in residents with dementia was nearly always conceptualized as a change in behavior to which nurses responded by trialing multiple interventions in attempts to return the resident to baseline, which despite current recommendations, did not include pain relief trials.
PubMedID- 22619661 Our literature search did not identify any studies on the use of opioids (op) and modified risk of cognitive deterioration in cognitively disabled patients, nor have op therapies for chronic pain among patients with dementia been studied .
PubMedID- 24134359 We used mds and administrative data to assess resident age, gender, behaviors, pain, and indications of psychoses, bipolar disorder, dementia, and depression.
PubMedID- 24476197 Background: nurses play a pivotal role in treating postoperative pain in patients with dementia and monitoring the effects of administered analgesics.
PubMedID- 25800276 Objective: to examine the relationship between self-reported pain and psychological well-being of people with dementia (pwd) living in residential long-term care as indicated by displays of observed emotional expression over the daytime period.
PubMedID- 21349237 This report details the case of a patient suffering from severe dementia with incident pain and response agitation that remitted with the use of sublingual sufentanil, a rapid-onset and ultra-brief acting opioid analgesic.
PubMedID- 25087440 pain in people with dementia is increasingly recognised as both underassessed and undertreated.

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