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Dive into the research topics where Marjolijn J. Sorbi is active.

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Featured researches published by Marjolijn J. Sorbi.


Pain | 1998

Prevalence of chronic benign pain disorder among adults: A review of the literature.

Peter F. M. Verhaak; Jan J. Kerssens; Joost Dekker; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Jozien M. Bensing

Abstract In this review epidemiological studies concerning chronic benign pain among adults are discussed. To this end, studies focusing on chronic pain, reporting prevalences at a population or primary health care level, including subjects aged between 18 and 75 years have been collected and analyzed. Focus of analysis was on research methods, definitions of chronic benign pain used, and reported prevalences. Prevalences varied between 2% and 40% of the population. Nor method used (telephone survey, postal survey, nor definition of chronicity (>1 month; >3 months; >6 months) clearly explained the differences in prevalence in the various studies. Implications for future research are discussed.


Pain | 2000

Electronic diary assessment of pain, disability and psychological adaptation in patients differing in duration of pain

Madelon L. Peters; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; D.A. Kruise; Jan J. Kerssens; Peter F. M. Verhaak; Jozien M. Bensing

Abstract Computerized diary measurement of pain, disability and psychological adaptation was performed four times a day for 4 weeks in 80 patients with various duration of unexplained pain. Reported are (1) the temporal characteristics and stability of pain report during the 4‐week measurement period, (2) the association between pain duration and pain report, disability and general psychopathology, and (3) the accordance between diary assessment versus questionnaire assessment of pain, disability and psychological adaptation. No evidence of instrument reactivity was found: pain report was stable across the 4‐week period. However, pain report appeared to be highly variable both between and within days. About half the patients showed a clear increasing trend in pain during the day. Several differences were found between subgroups of patients varying in pain duration. Patients with less than 6 months of pain reported significantly less pain intensity, disability and fatigue than patients whose pain persisted for more than 6 months. Pain coping and responses to pain behaviors by the spouse also differed for the subgroups: longer pain duration was associated with increased catastrophizing and solicitous responses from the spouse. Comparison of scores obtained with diary versus questionnaire assessment indicated moderate correlations for most variables. Retrospective (questionnaire) assessment of pain intensity yielded significantly higher pain scores than diary assessment.


Biological Psychology | 2007

Exhaustion and endocrine functioning in clinical burnout: An in-depth study using the experience sampling method

Mieke Sonnenschein; P.M.C. Mommersteeg; Jan H. Houtveen; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Wilmar B. Schaufeli; Lorenz J.P. van Doornen

The current study investigates the relationship between HPA-axis functioning and burnout symptoms by employing an electronic symptom diary. This diary method circumvents the retrospection bias induced by symptom questionnaires and allows to study relationships within-in addition to between-subjects. Forty two clinically burned-out participants completed the exhaustion subscale of the Maslach burnout inventory and kept an electronic diary for 2 weeks to assess momentary exhaustion and daily recovery through sleep. On 3 consecutive weekdays within the diary period, saliva was sampled to determine the cortisol awakening response (CAR), levels of dehydroepiandrosterone-sulphate (DHEAS) on the first 2 weekdays, and to conduct the dexamethasone suppression test (DST) on the third weekday. We found significant relationships between endocrine values and general momentary symptom severity as assessed with the diary, but not with the retrospective questionnaire-assessed burnout symptoms. Simultaneous assessments of endocrine values and burnout symptoms assessed with the diary after awakening rendered significant associations between persons, and a trend within persons. More severe burnout symptoms were consistently associated with a lower level and smaller increase of CAR, higher DHEAS levels, smaller cortisol/DHEAS ratios and a stronger suppression after DST. Burnout symptoms were significantly related to endocrine functioning in clinical burnout under the best possible conditions of symptom measurement. This adds support to the view that severity of burnout symptoms is associated with HPA-axis functioning.


Pain | 1997

Accuracy of children's pain memories

Lyonne N.L Zonneveld; Patrick J. McGrath; Graham J. Reid; Marjolijn J. Sorbi

Abstract Despite its importance in clinical practice, little research has examined memory for pain in children. This prospective study tried to justify the use of childrens pain recall in clinical practice. The purpose of this study was to (a) investigate the accuracy of childrens recall of their worst and average pain intensity when controlling for the effects of repeated pain measurement and (b) examine the influence of childrens anxiety, age, general memory ability and pain coping strategies on this accuracy. The accuracy of childrens recalled pain intensities was studied in 55 inpatients aged 5–16 years by comparing the level of recorded pain intensity with the level of recalled pain intensity 1 day and 1 week after recording using Bieris Faces Pain Scale. The accuracy of childrens recalled pain intensities was high and showed little decrement over 1 week. Older children had more accurate recall of their worst pain intensity. Anxiety, general memory ability and pain coping strategies were not related to accuracy of recalled pain intensities.


Journal of Medical Internet Research | 2007

Mobile Web-Based Monitoring and Coaching: Feasibility in Chronic Migraine

Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Sander B Mak; Jan H. Houtveen; Annet Kleiboer; Lorenz van Doornen

Background The Internet can facilitate diary monitoring (experience sampling, ecological momentary assessment) and behavioral coaching. Online digital assistance (ODA) is a generic tool for mobile Web-based use, intended as an adjuvant to face-to-face or Internet-based cognitive behavioral treatment. A current ODA application was designed to support home-based training of behavioral attack prevention in chronic migraine, focusing on the identification of attack precursors and the support of preventive health behaviour. Objective The aim was to establish feasibility of the ODA approach in terms of technical problems and participant compliance, and ODA acceptability on the basis of ratings of user-friendliness, potential burden, and perceived support of the training for behavioral attack prevention in migraine. Methods ODA combines mobile electronic diary monitoring with direct human online coaching of health behavior according to the information from the diary. The diary contains three parts covering the following: (1) migraine headache and medication use, (2) attack precursors, and (3) self-relaxation and other preventive behavior; in addition, menstruation (assessed in the evening diary) and disturbed sleep (assessed in the morning diary) is monitored. The pilot study consisted of two runs conducted with a total of five women with chronic migraine without aura. ODA was tested for 8.5 days (range 4-12 days) per participant. The first test run with three participants tested 4-5 diary prompts per day. The second run with another three participants (including one subject who participated in both runs) tested a reduced prompting scheme (2-3 prompts per day) and minor adaptations to the diary. Online coaching was executed twice daily on workdays. Results ODA feasibility was established on the basis of acceptable data loss (1.2% due to the personal digital assistant; 5.6% due to failing Internet transmission) and good participant compliance (86.8% in the second run). Run 1 revealed some annoyance with the number of prompts per day. Overall ODA acceptability was evident by the positive participant responses concerning user-friendliness, absence of burden, and perceived support of migraine attack prevention. The software was adapted to further increase the flexibility of the application. Conclusions ODA is feasible and well accepted. Tolerability is a sensitive issue, and the balance between benefit and burden must be considered with care. ODA offers a generic tool to combine mobile coaching with diary monitoring,independently of time and space. ODA effects on improvement of migraine remain to be established.


Journal of Headache and Pain | 2011

Team players against headache: multidisciplinary treatment of primary headaches and medication overuse headache

Charly Gaul; Corine M. Visscher; Rhia Bhola; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Federica Galli; Annette Rasmussen; Rigmor Jensen

Multidisciplinary approaches are gaining acceptance in headache treatment. However, there is a lack of scientific data about the efficacy of various strategies and their combinations offered by physiotherapists, physicians, psychologists and headache nurses. Therefore, an international platform for more intense collaboration between these professions and between headache centers is needed. Our aims were to establish closer collaboration and an interchange of knowledge between headache care providers and different disciplines. A scientific session focusing on multidisciplinary headache management was organised at The European Headache and Migraine Trust International Congress (EHMTIC) 2010 in Nice. A summary of the contributions and the discussion is presented. It was concluded that effective multidisciplinary headache treatment can reduce headache frequency and burden of disease, as well as the risk for medication overuse headache. The significant value of physiotherapy, education in headache schools, and implementation of strategies of cognitive behavioural therapy was highlighted and the way paved for future studies and international collaboration.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 2006

Electronic momentary assessment in chronic pain. I: Psychological pain responses as predictors of pain intensity

Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Madelon L. Peters; D.A. Kruise; Cora J. M. Maas; Jan J. Kerssens; Peter F. M. Verhaak; Jozien M. Bensing

Objectives and Methods:More than 7100 electronic diaries from 80 patients with chronic pain (mean: 89.3, range 30-115) entered multilevel analyses to establish the statistical prediction of disability by pain intensity and by psychological functioning (fear avoidance, cognitive, and spousal pain responses). We also tested the differences between prechronic, recently chronic, and persistently chronic pain in the prediction of disability (impaired physical and mental capacity, pain interference with activities, immobility due to pain). Results:Pain intensity explained 8% to 19% of the disability variance. Beyond this psychological functioning explained 7% to 16%: particularly fear-avoidance and cognitive pain responses predicted chronic pain disorder disability; spousal responses predicted immobility better than other aspects of disability. Immobility due to actual pain occurred infrequently. When it did, however, it was better predicted by avoidance behavior in the patient and by spousal discouragement of movement than by actual pain intensity. The prediction of immobility due to pain by, respectively, avoidance behavior and catastrophizing was better in chronic pain (>6 months) and that of physical impairment by catastrophizing better in persistently chronic pain (>12 months) than in pain of shorter duration. Discussion:The psychological prediction of chronic pain disorder disability was determined beyond that accounted for by pain intensity. Nonetheless, psychological functioning explained substantial variance in chronic pain disorder disability. The psychological prediction of immobility and physical impairment was stronger with longer pain duration. Patient characteristics and momentary states of disability-and in particular of immobility-should be carefully distinguished and accounted for in chronic pain disorder.


Headache | 1998

Presentation of chronic daily headache: a clinical study.

Egilius L. H. Spierings; Maya Schroevers; Peter C. Honkoop; Marjolijn J. Sorbi

We studied the presentation of chronic daily headache in 258 patients from a private headache practice, 50 men and 208 women. Chronic daily headache was defined as headaches, occurring at least 5 days per week for at least 1 year.


Headache | 1997

Psychophysical precedents of migraine in relation to the time of onset of the headache: the migraine time line.

Egilius L. H. Spierings; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Gerard H. Maassen; Peter C. Honkoop

We conducted a prospective study of 19 female migraine patients who kept a diary four times per day at 8 AM, I PM, 6 PM, and 11 PM for 10 consecutive weeks. In the diary, the patients recorded the occurrence as well as the features and associated symptoms of their headaches. They also rated five mood states: alertness, tension, irritability, depression, and fatigue, as well as the quality of sleep and the incidence and stressfulness of daily hassles as measurements of stress. They quantified the variables through the use of 100‐mm visual analog scales.


The Clinical Journal of Pain | 1996

Changes in daily hassles, mood, and sleep in the 2 days before a migraine headache

Egilius L. H. Spierings; Marjolijn J. Sorbi; Barbara R. Haimowitz; Bert Tellegen

OBJECTIVE The determination of the changes in the incidence and stressfulness of daily hassles as well as in the mood states: alert, tense, irritable, annoyed, depressed, and tired and in the quality of sleep in the 2 days before a migraine headache. DESIGN Prospective cohort study. SETTING Private headache practice. PATIENTS Twenty female migraine patients. INTERVENTIONS Diary four times per day for 10 consecutive weeks with the variables quantified through the use of 100-mm visual analogue scales. RESULTS The incidence and stressfulness of daily hassles as well as the mood states: tense, irritable, annoyed, depressed, and tired were significantly increased in the 2 days before a migraine headache in comparison to control days. CONCLUSIONS The results confirm previous studies that daily hassles are increased in the days before a migraine headache. They also show that the increase in daily hassles is associated with mood changes, particularly consisting of tension and depression.

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Saskia Y.M. Mérelle

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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