Friday 3 January 2014

ALS, pain and depression



As a result of the collaboration between the Crossing Dialogues Association and the ALS Centre of the University La Sapienza in Rome, an interdisciplinary study on the relationship between pain, depression and quality of life in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis has been published. The article is freely readable at: http://www.functionalneurology.com/index.php?PAGE=articolo_dett&id_article=5970&ID_ISSUE=691

Here is the abstract: The complications related to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) include pain. A higher risk of depression and a negative effect on quality of life (QoL) might be expected in ALS patients with pain. The aims of this study were to evaluate the prevalence of pain in ALS patients, to compare measures of depression and QoL in patients with and without pain, and to study the influence of depression scores and pain on the QoL of ALS patients with pain. Forty ALS patients were enrolled, and 36 were included in the analysis. Seventy-two percent of patients reported pain. Pain intensity was significantly related to a worsening of QoL (p<.05). This effect was no longer significant after considering depression scores as a covariate. Depression scores significantly decreased QoL (p<.02) and this effect remained significant after considering pain intensity as a covariate (p<.05). Our study suggests that pain is frequent in ALS patients and that depressive symptoms are significantly related to poorer QoL. Clinicians should pay more attention to both pain and depressive symptoms in ALS patients considering their effect on QoL.

Liam Keating - Associative and oppositional thinking

Is there a real difference between the brain hemispheres? Liam Keating discusses this important subject in "Associative and opposi...