戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 cal symptoms (e.g., depression, anxiety, and somatization).
2 ymptoms among subjects with higher levels of somatization.
3 t; learning/memory; anxiety; depression; and somatization.
4  of anxiety, depression, anger-hostility, or somatization.
5 they display other aspects of the process of somatization.
6 ls of other posttraumatic symptoms including somatization.
7 toms plus a long (> or = 2 years) history of somatization.
8 acts on symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization.
9  (20.5%) received a provisional diagnosis of somatization; 42.3% of these patients had no comorbid de
10 2 vs. 50.0), depression (50.2 vs. 46.1), and somatization (70.3 vs. 61.8).
11 og/g) was associated with 21% higher odds of somatization (95% confidence interval of the odds ratio:
12 re attributable to the incremental effect of somatization alone.
13 n individuals, the patterns suggest possible somatization and behavioral (e.g., dietary) responses to
14 risk factors for these ratings were maternal somatization and Chornobyl-related stress.
15 often the mother) in terms of their anxiety, somatization and coping skills can, however, modulate th
16 minations, worse working memory scores, more somatization and depression symptoms, and lower quality
17 s (measured with the Impact of Event Scale), somatization and general distress (measured with the SCL
18 med to investigate the possible link between somatization and intestinal barrier in IBS with diarrhoe
19 gical distress as well as characteristics of somatization and its antecedents.
20 n of how these disorders are associated with somatization and pain is essential for the assessment an
21 ed with self-report questionnaires assessing somatization and psychiatric disorder.
22       In the analysis of veterans with PTSD, somatization and PTSD symptom severity were significantl
23 , with large effect sizes for PTSD and CPTSD somatization and small to medium effect sizes for all ot
24 variables (e.g., PTSD status, PTSD severity, somatization) and a behavioral variable (pack-year histo
25                          PTSD, dissociation, somatization, and affect dysregulation represent a spect
26 he nature of the trauma, PTSD, dissociation, somatization, and affect dysregulation were collected.
27                          PTSD, dissociation, somatization, and affect dysregulation were highly inter
28 ment of symptoms associated with depression, somatization, and anxiety, as well as demographic, healt
29                           Levels of anxiety, somatization, and delinquency were elevated in some, but
30 ), total number of physical health ailments, somatization, and demographics.
31 tients completed standardized PTSD severity, somatization, and depression measures.
32 er patient-related factors such as delirium, somatization, and depression should be considered.
33 tatus and PTSD symptom severity, depression, somatization, and health behaviors in PTSD patients was
34 d had higher scores for depression, anxiety, somatization, and interpersonal sensitivity (low self-es
35             Symptoms of depression, anxiety, somatization, anger-hostility, dissociation and 'limbic
36        Age, sex, number of overlapping DGBI, somatization, anxiety, depression, and functional experi
37             Furthermore, the localization of somatization associated with childhood maltreatment and
38                                  We observed somatization-by-time interaction effects for bloating (P
39     Psychological characteristics, including somatization, depression, and anxiety as well as a histo
40 gical scores (global psychological distress, somatization, depression, and anxiety) and worse quality
41               Patients showed high levels of somatization, depression, obsessive-compulsive behavior,
42 anic disorder (36 versus 13%, P < 0.001) and somatization disorder (27 versus 0%, P < 0001).
43 ied a similar number of patients with DSM-IV somatization disorder (74 and 70), only 21 cases were co
44 Care study were used to examine stability of somatization disorder and somatization symptoms over 12
45 ary care, the DSM-IV diagnostic criteria for somatization disorder are too restrictive, while the cri
46 ignificant implications for the diagnosis of somatization disorder by structured interview and may al
47                      Research assessments of somatization disorder depend on lifetime recall of medic
48                      Diagnostic criteria for somatization disorder emphasize its early onset and long
49 h asked about lifetime symptoms, the loss of somatization disorder or individual somatic symptoms can
50 high rates of Briquet's syndrome (hysteria), somatization disorder, antisocial personality disorder,
51 atients in St. Louis met criteria for either somatization disorder, Briquet's syndrome, antisocial pe
52  independent predictors of outcome, although somatization disorder, general health, pain and total sy
53  mental disorders, 4th edition) criteria for somatization disorder, which was diagnosed only after ex
54 ve significantly higher rates of depression, somatization, distress, or anxiety compared with CCSS si
55 s having anxious depression if their anxiety/somatization factor score from the 17-item Hamilton Depr
56 psychological distress, anxiety, depression, somatization, fear of cancer recurrence, satisfaction wi
57                                Patients with somatization had approximately twice the outpatient and
58              Depression and anxiety, but not somatization, have already been associated with altered
59 cipant was assessed for depression, anxiety, somatization, hostility, and stress.
60 as having low somatization (LS = 19) or high somatization (HS = 28) according to the Symptom Checklis
61  These associations likely reflect increased somatization in individuals exposed to childhood maltrea
62 espect to somatic symptoms on the Children's Somatization Inventory and Child Behavior Checklist.
63 ed to coronary-artery calcification and that somatization is associated with the absence of calcifica
64  but their frequency varies depending on how somatization is defined.
65                               Depression and somatization levels are associated specifically with inc
66                                              Somatization levels had a main effect on all 5 symptoms
67 IBS-D patients were classified as having low somatization (LS = 19) or high somatization (HS = 28) ac
68  [SD] scores, 52.6 [13.1] vs 47.8 [9.4]) and somatization (mean [SD] scores, 55.5 [15.5] vs 47.0 [7.6
69 ), anxiety (mean [SD] VIM, 4.15 [0.11]), and somatization (mean [SD] VIM, 3.99 [0.15]), even though i
70 espread pain can be one manifestation of the somatization of distress.
71  (OR = 4.8), third molar removal (OR = 3.2), somatization (OR = 3.7), and female gender (OR = 4.2).
72  (OR = 3.3), third molar removal (OR = 4.0), somatization (OR = 5.1), and female gender (OR = 4.7).
73 , depression (OR, 4.29 [95% CI, 2.44-7.55]), somatization (OR, 1.63 [95% CI, 1.05-2.53]), impaired ta
74 efficiency (OR, 2.93; 95% CI, 2.28 to 3.77), somatization (OR, 2.29; 95% CI, 1.77 to 2.98), and depre
75 2.9), depression (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.2-1.9), somatization (OR, 4.1; 95% CI, 2.7-6.0), neuroticism (OR
76 y (P<.001) less hypochondriacal and had less somatization (P<.001) and disability than at inception,
77 ficantly less disease conviction (P<.05) and somatization (P<.01) at inception, and their incidence o
78 al and physical indicators of the process of somatization predict the development of new chronic wide
79 ) were significantly associated with greater somatization (PTSD and CPTSD, eta2 = 0.205; 95% CI, 0.20
80 d based on Rome II criteria also completed a somatization questionnaire.
81 e, SF-36 Physical Component Summary, and BSI-Somatization scales (| d| >/= 0.50; P < .01), in contras
82 n multivariate logistic-regression models, a somatization score greater than 4 (out of a possible 26)
83  Scale for Children, Third Edition mean [SD] somatization score, 52.1 [13.0] vs 46.5 [8.5]; mean diff
84 tion reduced distress (GSI), depression, and somatization scores (BSI-18: p < 0.01, p < 0.05, p < 0.0
85 omatic symptoms and anxiety, depression, and somatizations scores as assessed by the Behavior Assessm
86 n all outcome measures, except they had more somatization symptoms (Behavior Assessment Scale for Chi
87 iles of prepubertal anxiety, depression, and somatization symptoms and the timing of each pubertal ou
88 amine stability of somatization disorder and somatization symptoms over 12 months.
89 , and self-reported depression, anxiety, and somatization symptoms were measured.
90 a greater prevalence of mental disorders and somatization than that found in the general population,
91                                              Somatization (the number and severity of durable physica
92 pression, IBS symptoms, quality of life, and somatization using validated questionnaires.
93                                              Somatization was measured using the Somatic Symptom Scal
94 nxiety disorders, dissociative symptoms, and somatization, with a significant decrease in the number