Clinical evidence on visceral pain. Systematic review

ABSTRACT BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Visceral pain is induced by abnormalities of organs such as stomach, kidneys, bladder, gallbladder, intestines and others and includes distension, ischemia, inflammation and mesenteric traction. It is responsible for physical and psychic incapacity, absenteeism an...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inRevista Dor Vol. 18; no. 1; pp. 65 - 71
Main Authors Kraychete, Durval Campos, Siqueira, José Tadeu Tesseroli de, Garcia, João Batista, Sakata, Rioko Kimiko, Sousa, Ângela Maria, Andrade, Daniel Ciampi de, Zakka, Telma Regina Mariotto, Teixeira, Manoel Jacobsen
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Sociedade Brasileira para o Estudo da Dor 01.03.2017
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:ABSTRACT BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Visceral pain is induced by abnormalities of organs such as stomach, kidneys, bladder, gallbladder, intestines and others and includes distension, ischemia, inflammation and mesenteric traction. It is responsible for physical and psychic incapacity, absenteeism and poor quality of life. This study aimed at discussing major aspects of visceral pain with regard to prevalence, etiology and diagnosis. CONTENTS: According to Evidence-Based Medicine concepts, visceral pain etiology, diagnosis and prognosis were reviewed in LILACS, EMBASE and Pubmed databases. Therapeutic studies were not selected. The following terms were used as search strategy: ("visceral pain"[MeSH Terms] OR ("visceral"[All Fields] AND "pain"[All Fields]) OR "visceral pain"[All Fields]). Only studies published in Portuguese, English or Spanish were included. Narrative reviews with opinionated content and specific therapeutic procedures of medical specialties were excluded. Studies on visceral pain related to heart, cancer and musculoskeletal diseases and pregnancy were also excluded. CONCLUSION: Visceral pain is a heterogeneous condition where most frequent presentation is abdominal pain in the course of irritable bowel syndrome. Other diseases induce visceral pain and adequate diagnosis is critical for effective treatment.
ISSN:1806-0013
2317-6393
2317-6393
DOI:10.5935/1806-0013.20170014