International Journal of Molecular Medicine is an international journal devoted to molecular mechanisms of human disease.
International Journal of Oncology is an international journal devoted to oncology research and cancer treatment.
Covers molecular medicine topics such as pharmacology, pathology, genetics, neuroscience, infectious diseases, molecular cardiology, and molecular surgery.
Oncology Reports is an international journal devoted to fundamental and applied research in Oncology.
Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine is an international journal devoted to laboratory and clinical medicine.
Oncology Letters is an international journal devoted to Experimental and Clinical Oncology.
Explores a wide range of biological and medical fields, including pharmacology, genetics, microbiology, neuroscience, and molecular cardiology.
International journal addressing all aspects of oncology research, from tumorigenesis and oncogenes to chemotherapy and metastasis.
Multidisciplinary open-access journal spanning biochemistry, genetics, neuroscience, environmental health, and synthetic biology.
Open-access journal combining biochemistry, pharmacology, immunology, and genetics to advance health through functional nutrition.
Publishes open-access research on using epigenetics to advance understanding and treatment of human disease.
An International Open Access Journal Devoted to General Medicine.
Exploring the association between pain, demographic and clinical variables in Georgian patients with Parkinson's disease
Pain is a frequent occurrence in Parkinson's disease (PD), with a reported prevalence of >80%. The first ever validated scale to assess pain in PD, the King's PD Pain Scale (KPPS), was developed in 2015. The present study aimed to evaluate the correlation between general demographic (age and sex) and PD‑related characteristics (disease duration, cognitive function, anxiety, depression and disability) and the KPPS score in a patient population with PD. A total of 100 adult patients, aged 45‑86 years, were assessed. The study measured the correlation between PD‑related pain and age, time from disease onset, disability due to impaired mobility, depression severity, anxiety severity, cognitive function and PD severity, followed by multiple regression analysis to determine individual KPPS domain and total scores. Moderate, positive correlations were found between anxiety severity and the KPPS total score, and between disease severity and KPPS Domain 4 score. In addition, weak correlations were present between the following: Anxiety severity and KPPS Domain 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 scores; age and KPPS Domain 3 score; disability due to impaired mobility and KPPS Domain 4 and KPPS total scores; depression and Domain 1, 4, 5, 7 and KPPS total scores. In multiple regression models, the anxiety score was found to be a predictor of Domain 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6, and KPPS total scores; the disease severity score was a predictor of Domain 4 score; impaired mobility predicted KPPS total score; and depression severity predicted Domain 1 score. Consistent with prior evidence, the correlation and predictive association between anxiety severity and PD‑related pain strongly suggest a cause‑and‑effect association. The association between depression and pain is inconsistently demonstrated and may be subtle and nuanced, although less likely causal. No association was found between KPPS and disease duration, cognitive function or sex. Further research is required regarding the association between clinical and demographical variables and PD‑related pain.