توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Symptom Fluctuation in Fibromyalgia: Environmental, Psychological and Psychobiological Influences
نام کتاب : Symptom Fluctuation in Fibromyalgia: Environmental, Psychological and Psychobiological Influences
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : نوسان علائم در فیبرومیالژیا: تأثیرات محیطی ، روانی و روانی
سری :
نویسندگان : Kerstin Wentz
ناشر : De Gruyter
سال نشر : 2013
تعداد صفحات : 196
ISBN (شابک) : 9783110313802 , 9783110313734
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 989 کیلوبایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Introduction\nWhat is the meaning of the label fibromyalgia?\nWhat are the settings of fibromyalgia?\nLong lasting musculoskeletal pain, long lasting widespread pain and fibromyalgia\nReferences\nSection I: The developmental phase of symptoms\n 1 Fibromyalgia seen through the life histories of the afflicted women\n 1.1 Introduction\n 1.2 Our study\n 1.3 What did we find?\n 1.4 An overstrained self as a child\n 1.5 An adult woman with an unprotected self; high load, self loading and dissociation of unmanageable mental content\n 1.6 Compensating strategies\n 1.7 Discussion\n 1.8 Why women?\n 1.9 Chronic illness\n 1.10 Limitations\n References\n 2 Dissociative and self-loading patterns in adult life\n 2.1 Introduction\n 2.2 Our study\n 2.3 Our findings\n 2.4 Discussion\n 2.5 Is “ unsuccessful†dissociation …\n 2.6 … effective in a fibromyalgia development process?\n 2.7 The I myself scale\n 2.8 Limitations\n 2.9 Acknowledgements\n References\n 3 Psychological, psychobiological and environmental patterns during the developmental phase\n 3.1 Environmental stressors\n 3.2 Psychological and somatic load from trauma as accidents\n 3.3 Abuse and neglect\n 3.4 Localized pain, high load, monotonous tasks, or bullying in working life\n 3.5 Relentless load from premorbid over activity\n 3.6 Aging\n 3.7 Difficulties sleeping\n References\n 4 Increase in mental load: life events as triggers of generalized pain\n 4.1 Mental load\n 4.2 Discussion\n References\nSection II: Living with fibromyalgia\n 5 The phase of living with fibromyalgia\n 5.1 A continued high level of mental load\n 5.2 Reduction of cognitive functioning\n 5.3 Discussion\n 5.4 Could such a tentative model be verified?\n References\n 6 Variation in the level of pain\n 6.1 To live under stress and to be more reactive to stress when stress induces more clinical pain\n 6.2 Pain inhibitory function and invariability in pain\n 6.3 Naturalistic data\n 6.4 Working conditions at work and at home\n 6.5 Sleep\n 6.6 Exercise\n 6.7 Emotions and emotional processing\n 6.8 Suppression, dissociation, and pain\n 6.9 Dissociation\n 6.10 Being overactive\n 6.11 Association is the opposite of dissociation, suppression, or controlling\n 6.12 Group treatment, significant others, and substantial gaps in pain\n 6.13 Addressing emotional processing deficits\n 6.14 Addressing ANS unbalance\n 6.15 The ANS and biofeedback\n References\n 7 Dissociation interferes with gaps in pain\n 7.1 Introduction\n 7.2 Level of symptoms\n 7.3 Gaps in pain\n 7.4 Psychosocial processes and fibromyalgia processes connected\n 7.5 The study\n 7.6 This is what was found\n 7.7 Keeping distress out of sight\n 7.8 Discontinued crisis or not accepting\n 7.9 Not planning a pain gap\n 7.10 Losing the unplanned pain gap\n 7.11 Acceptance/creating pain gaps\n 7.12 Discussion\n 7.13 The fragile balance of the pain-gaps\n 7.14 Adapting to impairment\n 7.15 Dissociation\n 7.16 Transformation as rehabilitation\n 7.17 Limitations\n 7.18 Acknowledgement\n References\nSection III: Recovery from fibromyalgia\n 8 Women ’ s narrations on the process of recovery from fibromyalgia\n 8.1 Introduction\n 8.2 Our sample\n 8.3 What did we find?\n 8.4 Strong but not enough to be weak\n 8.5 Increase in mental load – development of fibromyalgia\n 8.6 Challenge of fibromyalgia\n 8.7 Decrease in mental load – symptom remission\n 8.8 On parole – strengthened enough to be weak\n 8.9 Discussion\n 8.10 Patterns compared\n 8.11 Transformation as a remedy?\n 8.12 Implications for treatment and prevention\n 8.13 Methodological considerations\n 8.14 Conclusions\n 8.15 Acknowledgements\n References\nSection IV: Environmental, psychological and psychobiological fluctuations\n 9 Factors influencing onset, level of symptoms, gaps in pain, recovery and maintenance\n 9.1 The onset\n 9.2 Environmental aspects\n 9.3 Psychological aspects\n 9.4 Psychobiological aspects\n 9.5 Level of symptoms\n 9.6 Psychobiological influence\n 9.7 Psychological influence\n 9.8 Environmental influence\n 9.9 Gaps in fibromyalgia pain\n 9.10 Psychological context\n 9.11 Environmental regulation\n 9.12 Recovery\n 9.13 Psychobiological processes\n 9.14 Environmental context\n 9.15 Maintenance as in a maintained level of stress?\n 9.16 Psychological functioning\n 9.17 Impaired cognitive functioning is a part of a cognitive-emotional pattern\n 9.18 Psychobiological dysregulation\n 9.19 Working life\n 9.20 Knowledge and power\n 9.21 Discussion\n 9.22 Chronic or traumatic stress: cognitive and physiological correlates\n 9.23 Inflammation\n 9.24 Considerations on treatment. What are the targets and the means?\n References\nSection V: Acknowledgements\nAbout the author\nAcknowledgements\nIndex