2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpain.2008.08.006
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Diclofenac Potassium Attenuates Dysmenorrhea and Restores Exercise Performance in Women With Primary Dysmenorrhea

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Cited by 50 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…25 We did measure baseline pain, however, and found it was unrelated to increases in pain among women not using HCs in the early follicular phase (r ¼ À0.295, p ¼ 0.379); our qualitative data, moreover, indicate that women in this category who reported the type of pain they were experiencing primarily described pain in their legs, feet, and ankles, not menstrual pain. Nonetheless, the current findings suggest the value of future work examining whether exercise-induced increases in pain and RPE are coincident with or independent of dysmenorrhea during the early follicular phase.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 67%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…25 We did measure baseline pain, however, and found it was unrelated to increases in pain among women not using HCs in the early follicular phase (r ¼ À0.295, p ¼ 0.379); our qualitative data, moreover, indicate that women in this category who reported the type of pain they were experiencing primarily described pain in their legs, feet, and ankles, not menstrual pain. Nonetheless, the current findings suggest the value of future work examining whether exercise-induced increases in pain and RPE are coincident with or independent of dysmenorrhea during the early follicular phase.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…24 In another recent study, women experiencing dysmenorrhea during the early follicular phase had decreased exercise performance compared to the midfollicular phase. 25 Outside the context of exercise, women seem to have increased clinical and experimental pain during the late luteal and early follicular phases, associated with declining or low levels of estrogen and progesterone, 26 although the precise hormonal cause has not been elucidated. Estrogen is known to modulate pain in women, ameliorating some types of pain (e.g., migraines, arthritis) but exacerbating others.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…NSAID-preparater har overbevisende smertestillende effekt ved dysmenoré sammenliknet med placebo (4,12,13) (14). Når ulike NSAID-preparater sammenliknes med hverandre eller med paracetamol, er det ikke kunnskapsgrunnlag for at ett NSAID-preparat er bedre enn et annet i forhold til effekt og bivirkninger, men NSAIDpreparater synes mer effektive enn paracetamol (4,10,12).…”
Section: Behandling Av Primaer Dysmenoréunclassified
“…In some studies, physical activity proved to help venous return through muscle contraction which in turn leads to an increase in the production of prostaglandins and the substances. Moreover, findings prevent their collection in the pelvis but it is important that an average level of practice and regular exercise can be effective on menstruation (16,(18)(19)(20). Exercise affects the level of steroid hormones in blood circulation of the women in reproducing age (21,22).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%