• Although often falsely recognized as acute stress disorder, depression, adjustment disorder, or other mental disorders, Ulysses syndrome differs from these pathologies in important ways: Acute stress disorder: Ulysses syndrome is brought about by chronic exposure to toxic stress, whereas the symptoms of acute stress disorder by definition are limited to one month. (wikipedia.org)
  • This is Part 2 of a three-part series on a pertinent philosophical question in the era of diagnostic inflation: What conceptual means are available to prevent deviant and undesirable behavioral conditions from being diagnosed as mental disorders as a result of social bias and stigma? (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • Criteria from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition ( DSM-5 ) should be used in the diagnosis of dementia. (medscape.com)
  • Recent classification systems such as Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , 5th edition, and International Classification of Diseases , 11th revision, have emphasised the importance of reliable, objective criteria to ground their diagnostic frameworks. (racgp.org.au)
  • In the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions III, the 12-month and lifetime prevalence of alcohol use disorder based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition , ( DSM-5 ) definition among adults in the United States were 13.9% and 29.1%, respectively. (medscape.com)
  • Recently there have been reports of an increase in the prevalence of musculoskeletal conditions among dental professionals, with an etiology of repetitive movements, injuries due to cumulative trauma or work-related musculoskeletal disorders 1-2 . (bvsalud.org)
  • Acute or repetitive (cumulative) trauma may give rise to inflammation of the affected bursa. (medscape.com)
  • More commonly, repetitive (cumulative) trauma is involved. (medscape.com)
  • Such trauma is caused by the repetitive contracture of the gluteus medius, the ITB, or both during running or walking. (medscape.com)
  • Altered length-tension imbalance patterns typically result from faulty posture, gravitational stress, repetitive movement, cumulative trauma, and loss of neuromuscular control. (yogauonline.com)
  • Dr. Mary Barbe, a neuroscientist from Temple University in Philadelphia, outlined her studies aimed at characterizing the short-term effects of repetitive and/or forceful tasks on musculoskeletal and neural pathologies with a focus on how inflammation increases sensorimotor dysfunction. (cndoctor.ca)
  • A solid knowledge of the functional anatomy of the rotator cuff makes it easier to understand the disorder that affect this structure. (medscape.com)
  • TMD is characterized as a number of related pathologies that affect the anatomy of the surrounding jaw joints. (bbptspokane.com)
  • Epidemiological studies have demonstrated a relationship between advancing age and susceptibility to risk factors for median neuropathies and musculoskeletal disorders. (cdc.gov)
  • Shoulder pain is the third most common cause of musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs), after low back and neck pain. (medscape.com)
  • Conclusions: However, given the multifactorial nature of occupational diseases, it is likely that overweight and obesity may act as a predisposing factor in these diseases, interacting and enhancing the effects of other important risk factors for the occurrence of work-related musculoskeletal disorders. (bvsalud.org)
  • Dr. Goodnough is a member of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, Orthopaedic Trauma Association, and AO, the global network of doctors dedicated to the surgical treatment of trauma and musculoskeletal disorders. (stanford.edu)
  • Although there is some evidence developing brains are more vulnerable to trauma - it creates a chronic inflammatory response affecting brain development - the pathology of CTE is still being studied. (yahoo.com)
  • Although they are not recent illnesses, CTD are undoubtedly taking on an epidemic character, and some of their pathologies are chronic and recurring, difficult to treat and are creating disability that is not restricted to the workplace but also found in other normal activities of personal life8. (bvsalud.org)
  • Dr. Woodhouse called attention to the fact that people with certain endocrine changes might be more susceptible to cumulative trauma and how endocrine "dysregulation" may underlie more chronic health disorders than previously thought. (cndoctor.ca)
  • Notably , NTSR1 and SPON1 were significantly differentially methylated in high relative to low blast exposed groups, suggesting that sleep dysregulation may be altered in response to chronic cumulative blast exposure. (frontiersin.org)
  • CMCC's own Dr. John Triano, professor and dean of graduate education, followed this with a discussion of the factors predisposing those with inflammation and/or impaired neuromuscular control resulting from cumulative trauma to a reduction in thoracolumbar myofascial shear. (cndoctor.ca)
  • Neuromuscular scoliosis is unique because it results from a larger medical disorder involving a disconnect between the brain and body communication affecting the spinal cord, brain, and muscular system. (wwportal.com)
  • Following this biologically based discussion, Dr. Linda Carroll, professor of epidemiology at the University of Alberta's School of Public Health and adjunct professor at CMCC, discussed the psychosocial factors involved in cumulative trauma injuries. (cndoctor.ca)
  • According to Ribas and Czlusniak 5 , developmental disorders in the enamel are presented as structural abnormalities, which may affect both dentitions, having a systemic, local or hereditary character. (bvsalud.org)
  • Part One examined the causes, conditions, and corrections for one of the most prevalent and painful of all structural disorders: forward-head postures. (yogauonline.com)
  • Prolonged exposure to repeated low-level impacts appears to produce a greater lifetime volume of brain trauma when compared with athletes who sustain a small number of more forceful injuries. (yahoo.com)
  • Along with citing the statistics characterizing these injuries and some of the more obvious factors responsible for them - ergonomic considerations, occupational requirements, etc. - both scientists made it clear that a variety of psychosocial factors also come into play in the formation and rehabilitation of cumulative traumas and in creating return-to-work strategies. (cndoctor.ca)
  • The event continued with presentations encompassing biomechanical, inflammatory and endocrine contributions to cumulative trauma injuries. (cndoctor.ca)
  • Dr. Diane Grondin, a DC and research scientist and instructor in the graduate and research programs at CMCC, reviewed prevention strategies for work-related cumulative trauma injuries. (cndoctor.ca)
  • He was recruited to the hospital a year and a half ago to lead a program of treatment and research on disorders of consciousness-seeing patients with TBI and other conditions whose injuries have impaired their consciousness in some way. (harvardmagazine.com)
  • Rather than focus on cumulative trauma disorders or issues covered under OSHA-mandated blood-borne pathogen guidelines, it's time to look at situations that foster workplace accidents and injuries. (rdhmag.com)
  • athletes participating in soccer, ice hockey, and running are among the most at risk for hip injuries and disorders that can occur as a result of acute trauma or overuse or as gradual onsets. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • The disorders known as low-temperature injuries or chilling injuries (CI) occur in some plant tissues at temperatures above the freezing point of the tissues but below the minimum recommended storage temperature [51]. (binaryoptioninc.com)
  • For military medical personnel who may be involved in the triage, treatment, and transport of such combat-related injuries, a publication entitled Guidelines for the Field Management of Combat-Related Head Trauma is available from the Brain Trauma Foundation, at www.braintrauma.org . (cellmedicine.com)
  • The guidelines were compiled by a group of civilian and military experts from the fields of neurosurgery, trauma and EMS who were assembled by the Brain Trauma Foundation for the specific purpose of formulating such guidelines that would address the particular nature of war-related head injuries. (cellmedicine.com)
  • Post-traumatic stress disorder: Both PTSD and Ulysses syndrome stem from a response to fear. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, disturbing thoughts or feelings about traumatic events as well as distress and avoidance of trauma-related cues do not occur in Ulysses syndrome, but does in PTSD, whereas stressors such as social isolation, lack of opportunities, discrimination, and prejudice are common for Ulysses syndrome and not for PTSD. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, an individual with Ulysses syndrome is at greater risk of disease and indeed, at a certain point the stressors may become too intense such that a true clinical mental disorder such as depression or PTSD can develop. (wikipedia.org)
  • Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric pathology wherein the precipitating traumatic event is essential for diagnostic eligibility (Criterion A). This link is substantiated throughout PTSD's development as a diagnosis. (tau.ac.il)
  • Making an argument for the negative, the paper briefly reviews complex PTSD (CPTSD), ongoing traumatic stress response (OTSR), and cumulative traumas, all of which are exemplars wherein Criterion A specification is crucial for understanding the emerging symptomatology and for devising appropriate interventions. (tau.ac.il)
  • Complex Trauma has many names including Complex PTSD (C-PTSD), Developmental Trauma, Attachment Trauma, Cumulative Trauma, and Relational Trauma. (bridger-counseling.com)
  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a complex mental health condition that can occur after a life-threatening or otherwise traumatic event. (cdc.gov)
  • Rotator cuff pathology can result from extrinsic or intrinsic factors. (medscape.com)
  • Rotator cuff tendinitis is the term used to describe irritation of tendons either from excessive pressure on the acromion or, less commonly, from intrinsic tendon pathology. (medscape.com)
  • OSA therefore is a major intrinsic sleep disorder. (hindawi.com)
  • This series is based on an essay ("Social Misuse of Disorder Designation: Exploring Dysfunction and Harm-Based Conceptual Defenses") that was awarded the 2018 Karl Jaspers Award by the Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • Given the important role dysfunction plays here, one would imagine that the DSM (and psychiatry, more broadly) would have a valid, unambiguous definition of dysfunction that would clearly determine which deviancies and conflicts are disorders and which are not, even in situations of controversy. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • Because of the tension, trauma and poor postural habits inherent in today's workplace, it is no surprise that head-on-neck and neck-on-thorax disorders rank high among the most common pain generators driving people into bodywork and movement practices. (yogauonline.com)
  • In this issue, common neck pathologies will be reviewed with special focus on the age-old "straight-neck" controversy and related conditions such as osteoarthritis, temporomandibular joint (TMJ) dysfunction and Dowager's hump. (yogauonline.com)
  • Significant abnormality or disease of the salivary glands, such as that associated with Sjögren syndrome or neoplasm, necessitates additional evaluation by an otolaryngologist or an otolaryngologist/head and neck surgeon for comprehensive treatment of the gland pathology itself. (medscape.com)
  • Acute trauma includes contusions from falls, contact sports, and other sources of impact. (medscape.com)
  • Acute trauma (eg, from a fall or tackle) that causes the patient to land on the lateral hip region can result in trochanteric bursitis. (medscape.com)
  • Traumatic scoliosis develops because of trauma or injury in your spine. (wwportal.com)
  • Fractures resulting from car accidents or falls are some of the common traumas. (wwportal.com)
  • Furthermore, stress fractures about the hip and dysfunction in the surrounding joints, such as the sacroiliac (SI) joint, are all among the various nonarthritic hip pathologies that lead to hip pain. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • Some medical conditions, particularly fractures, lacerations, costoclavicular syndrome, connective tissue diseases, vascular disorders such as Buerger's disease, generalized atherosclerosis, or a long history of high blood pressure, may result in the same signs and symptoms as primary Raynaud's phenomenon. (cdc.gov)
  • Although clinically distinct from mental health disorders, Ulysses syndrome exists on a spectrum between normal and disease. (wikipedia.org)
  • The alarming degree to which OSA is clinically diagnosed in middle-aged men and women makes it a significant public health problem, and increasing evidence indicates that untreated OSA can lead to several comorbid disorders. (hindawi.com)
  • Quantitative exposure-response relations were established between current work with highly elevated arms and clinically verified shoulder disorders. (bmj.com)
  • Conditions that predispose patients to trochanteric bursitis include underlying lower leg gait disturbances, spinal disorders, and sacroiliac disturbances. (medscape.com)
  • Historically, manipulation can trace its origins from parallel developments in many parts of the world where it was used to treat a variety of musculoskeletal conditions, including spinal disorders. (drjohnduppenthaleronline.com)
  • 1 ] Panoramic radiography is an extraoral radiographic modality used as a diagnostic tool for developmental disorders such as missing teeth, supernumeraries, ectopic tooth eruption, delayed primary root resorption, and detection of cysts, tumors, and some genetic disorders. (thieme-connect.com)
  • In another study, 98.6% of dentists of Caxias do Sul, RS, Brazil, had some symptoms of musculoskeletal disorder that were associated with certain demographic, clinical and laboratorial characteristics. (bvsalud.org)
  • Family members and peers' negative and positive body talk: How they relate to adolescent girls' body talk and eating disorder symptoms. (cripcas.ca)
  • Properly diagnosing and understanding hip pathology can be difficult because of its complex nature and the tendency for conditions to be concomitant and symptoms to overlap, but it is crucial nonetheless. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • With continuing exposure to vibration, the signs and symptoms become more severe and the pathology may become irreversible. (cdc.gov)
  • The strongest predictor for developing CTE is cumulative exposure to repeated brain trauma, rather than the number of diagnosable concussions. (yahoo.com)
  • 6, 7 However, most epidemiological investigations into the work relatedness of shoulder disorders suffer from methodological limitations, in particular concerning exposure assessment and verification of disorders. (bmj.com)
  • 14- 16 We aimed to establish quantitative exposure-response relations between work with highly elevated arms and shoulder disorders. (bmj.com)
  • We identified 14 significantly differentially methylated regions (DMRs) within genes associated with cumulative blast exposure in participants with high relative to low cumulative blast exposure. (frontiersin.org)
  • The bill called for a review of the cognitive effects of blast exposure including both the effects of successive blast events, and the feasibility of understanding the cumulative (lifetime or annual) limits of blast exposure ( 2 ). (frontiersin.org)
  • Using a model of unpredictable maternal separation and maternal stress (MSUS) in mice 13 , we examined whether trauma exposure in postnatal life can have beneficial effects on behaviour in the offspring. (nature.com)
  • In 2009, Yehuda and Bierer posited that epigenetic modifications, such as DNA methylation, may occur in response to environmental influences such as trauma exposure, thus altering the functional expression of genes. (cdc.gov)
  • These latest findings come as Australia 's Senate is due to report the findings of its inquiry into concussions and repeated head trauma in contact sport. (yahoo.com)
  • The disease is known to cause mood disorders and behaviour changes. (yahoo.com)
  • Often in practice, etiology becomes dysfunction when the condition has already been designed as a disorder on the behavioral level. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • For instance, in our example red hair being labeled as a disorder, we know red hair is produced by recessive genes and from a specific ratio of pheomelanin and eumelanin, but etiology by itself does not tell us that red hair results from a dysfunction. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • There are several risk factors associated with these disorders, which can be divided into individual risk factors and occupational risk factors. (bvsalud.org)
  • Moreover, deterioration of social and occupational functioning, which is often present in adjustment disorder, does not occur in Ulysses syndrome. (wikipedia.org)
  • The uprooting of peoples' lives caused by these events and their substantial adverse impacts give rise to a range of trauma-related physical and psychological consequences for direct victims as well as for those related to them. (madinamerica.com)
  • Substantial long term cumulative effects were not shown. (bmj.com)
  • A dysfunction-based defense against misuse of disorder designation has serious conceptual deficiencies, is vulnerable to social biases, and offers very little protection in practice. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • At the end of Part 1 , we noted that DSM recognizes the need to prevent arbitrary disorder designation of negatively valued conditions and does so by adopting a dysfunction-based defense. (psychiatrictimes.com)
  • This chapter will focus on the recognition and management of extra-articular hip pathologies. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • Adjustment disorder: One of the central diagnostic criteria for adjustment disorder is distress that is out of proportion to the severity or intensity of the stressor or stressors. (wikipedia.org)
  • Shoulder disorders have considerable impact on sickness absence, 1 utilisation of primary 2 and secondary 3, 4 health services, and premature withdrawal from the labour market. (bmj.com)
  • 8 The present lack of knowledge hampers the development of guidelines and regulations to prevent work related shoulder disorders. (bmj.com)
  • Last year, the fiscal year 2018 NDAA reported by the Senate Committee on Armed Services and ultimately approved by the Senate included provisions that would have individually and collectively restricted, if not outright prohibited, medical research on diseases and disorders that affect our nation's men and women who serve or have served in the U.S. Armed Services. (veteransforcommonsense.org)
  • The strong level of bipartisan Congressional support for the defense health research programs is a beacon of hope to the military families, retirees, veterans and civilians who must cope with these diseases and disorders. (veteransforcommonsense.org)
  • Pain was the primary symptom of disorder, affecting mainly the regions of the cervical spine, the elbows, lumbar spine and shoulders 10 . (bvsalud.org)
  • Inflammation of these sacs, called bursitis, can be caused by several different conditions and represents a common extra-articular pathology that is a source of hip pain. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • A recent systematic review of the literature conducted by Bryant 1 describes the 5-year cumulative survival rates of mandibular fixed and removable prostheses between 83% and 100%, with corresponding levels of crestal bone loss up to 1.1 mm the first year and 0.4 mm per year thereafter. (allenpress.com)
  • On October 29-30, the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College (CMCC) held its 2011 Research Symposium, titled Cumulative Trauma Injury, and with a focus on disability management, injury prevention and care for illness attributed to the work environment. (cndoctor.ca)
  • Dr. Grondin gave an overview of ergonomic and work schedule considerations that could lead to cumulative trauma and how the alert clinician can effectively facilitate prevention and/or recovery once injury has occurred. (cndoctor.ca)
  • While unrecognized, the trauma often makes itself known through troubling habits and behaviors which may also be present in other family and community members. (fiftyniftyandmore.com)
  • Usually, the combination of the cumulative effect of lifestyle habits and age-connected spinal degeneration is the main contributor to this type. (wwportal.com)
  • Ulysses syndrome is not a mental disorder, but rather a normal stress response by a healthy individual to an extreme situation that overwhelms the normal psychological mechanisms for coping. (wikipedia.org)
  • He has co-authored articles on his research discoveries in the Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgery, Journal of Orthopaedic Trauma, Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, and elsewhere. (stanford.edu)
  • He also has contributed to chapters in the textbooks Surgery of the Hip, Skeletal Trauma of the Upper Extremity, and Operative Techniques in Orthopedic Trauma. (stanford.edu)
  • In his book, Why Social Justice Matters, Brian Barry describes this process as cumulative disadvantage . (madinamerica.com)
  • We'll focus specifically on having a parent with borderline PD - but these suggestions could also help if your friend or cousin or sibling suffers from the disorder. (drmargaretrutherford.com)
  • We'll focus specifically on having a parent with borderline personality, but these suggestions would also help if your loved one is a friend or a cousin or a sibling that suffers from the disorder. (drmargaretrutherford.com)
  • The cumulative effect may create stress levels so intense that they exceed individuals' adaptive capacities and lead to a failure of the acculturation process. (wikipedia.org)
  • The following are considered to be the most likely individual risk factors: age, gender, body mass index, muscular imbalance, muscle strength, socioeconomic conditions and the presence of other pathologies. (bvsalud.org)
  • Childhood trauma may increase risk of schizophrenia and mood disorder in genetically high-risk children and adolescents by enhancing the accumulation of risk indicators. (cripcas.ca)
  • OSA is a risk factor for cardiovascular disorders including hypertension, congestive heart failure (CHF), myocardial ischemia, arrhythmias and infarction, and cerebrovascular conditions including stroke [ 3 ]. (hindawi.com)
  • The more widely researched conditions, and much of our understanding of hip pathologies, are associated with intra-articular pathologies and arthritic disorders. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • Based on the pathways of nerves through the hip and thigh regions, most intra-articular pathologies elicit pain that radiates to the anterior and medial hip (i.e., groin), whereas extra-articular conditions typically cause pain rotating to the posterior and lateral aspect of the hip. (musculoskeletalkey.com)
  • Further studies using valid methods that measure the impact of the disorder on general health (eg, the Medical Outcomes Study [MOS] Short-Form [SF]-36 health survey) should help in the evaluation of this issue. (medscape.com)
  • For the athletes in the Boston University study to develop CTE before the age of 30, it is likely they were exposed to repeated brain trauma from an early age through youth sport. (yahoo.com)
  • Aim: This study aimed to assess the prevalence of cumulative trauma disorders (CTD), overweight and obesity and the association between them, among public health dentists. (bvsalud.org)
  • Rather than a mental disorder, this syndrome is a natural reaction to toxic levels of stress seen in migrants who are otherwise in normal mental health. (wikipedia.org)
  • But unlike the athletic, aerobic, and downright acrobatic trend in Western yoga, Dr. Parker's practice centers on restorative yoga which focuses upon stillness as a powerful element in recovery from the centuries-deep effects of ethnic and racial stress and trauma. (fiftyniftyandmore.com)
  • Among possible valuable answers, the Italian Federation of Centers for the diagnosis of thrombotic disorders and the Surveillance of the Antithrombotic therapies (FCSA) proposes some experience-based suggestions and expert opinions. (bvsalud.org)
  • The cumulative effect of the Liberals' Bill C-92 will be to completely estrange native children from the norms, expectations and regulatory oversight that exist for all other children in Canada. (c2cjournal.ca)
  • It also covers the key role of pathology in the validation of molecular results and the complex assessment of predictive biomarkers. (nshealth.ca)
  • Overnight polysomnography (PSG) is the gold standard for the evaluation of sleep-related breathing disorders. (hindawi.com)