Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002622 (amnesia)
5,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors present psychiatric and neurologic data on 20 patients who developed mania after closed head trauma. An association was seen between severity of head trauma (based on length of posttraumatic amnesia), posttraumatic seizure disorder, and type of bipolar disorder. The manic episodes were characterized by irritable mood rather than euphoria and by assaultiveness. Psychosis occurred in only 15% of the sample, and 70% had no depressive episodes. Bipolar disorders were absent among 85 first-degree relatives. The authors suggest that posttraumatic seizures may be a predisposing factor in posttraumatic mania.
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PMID:Mania following head trauma. 379 47

A case of psychotic reaction to topical cyclopentolate HCl (Cyclogyl) in an adult is reported. The reaction was characterized by hallucination, disorientation, amnesia and aggressive behavior which lasted for approximately 2h.
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PMID:Psychotic reaction in an adult after topical cyclopentolate. 723 90

Phencyclidine (PCP) is a popular illicit drug often misrepresented as some other hallucinogenic substance and distributed in widely varying dosage forms and strengths. Users of hallucinogenic drugs may present with unintentional PCP overdoses. Toxicological laboratory analyses are essential to establish the diagnosis. In nine admitted overdose patients, the consciousness level ranged from alert to comatose on presentation, and all showed a prolonged recovery phase with agitation and toxic psychosis. Severe behavior disorder, paranoid ideation, and amnesia for the entire period of in-hospital stay are characteristic. In very high dose patients, shallow respiratory excursions and periods of apnoea and cyanosis coincided with generalized extensor spasm and spasm of neck muscles. Excessive bronchial secretions, gross ataxia, opisthotonic posturing, and grimacing occur. PCP toxic psychosis should be considered in drug-abusing patients presenting with schizophrenic-like symptoms, psychosis, or other bizarre behavior, whether or not they admit to taking PCP.
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PMID:Phencyclidine ingestion: drug abuse and psychosis. 728 52

Prior research on the MMPI has cautioned against misdiagnosing schizophrenia in patients with dissociative identity disorder. The present study examined the full spectrum of the dissociative experience in relation to MMPI-2 profiles. Ninety-eight women in treatment for trauma-related disorders completed the Dissociative Experiences Scale and the MMPI-2 in routine inpatient diagnostic evaluations. Consistent with prior research, severe dissociation was associated with high elevations on MMPI-2 scales typically associated with psychotic symptoms. Contrary to hypotheses, the ostensibly most benign form of dissociation, absorption and imaginative involvement, was somewhat more strongly related to MMPI-2 scores than the more pathognomonic forms of dissociation, depersonalization and amnesia. Although it should not be misdiagnosed, severe impairment on the MMPI in conjunction with dissociation should be taken seriously as suggesting vulnerability to psychotic experience. The dissociative retreat from the stressors of outer reality opens the door to the inner world of traumatic images and affects, along with compromised reality testing and disorganized thinking.
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PMID:Dissociation and vulnerability to psychotic experience. The Dissociative Experiences Scale and the MMPI-2. 756 6

Vascular dementia (VAD) is common, and small vessel disease is one of the most frequent etiologies of the disorder. Lacunar state and Binswanger's disease are the two types of VAD associated with small vessel disease. Lacunar state and Binswanger's disease produce a dementia syndrome with characteristics of subcortical dementia including slowing of information processing, impaired memory, and poor sustained attention. Executive dysfunction includes poor word list generation and verbal fluency (design generation), impaired motor programming with perseveration and impersistence, and difficulty with set shifting. Memory loss in subcortical VAD is characterized by poor retrieval and intact recognition. Apathy is ubiquitous in VAD and depression and psychosis are common. Parkinsonism with prominent gait disturbances in conjunction with pyramidal tract signs, dysarthria, pseudobulbar affect, and incontinence are frequent motor manifestations of VAD with small vessel disease. The lesions of subcortical VAD affect the structures--caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, thalamus-and connecting fibers of frontal--subcortical circuits and produce a clinical syndrome similar to that seen in other subcortical diseases.
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PMID:Vascular subcortical dementias: clinical aspects. 808 75

Amnesia characterized by a severe impairment of the memory without a loss of consciousness is one of the 'classical' organic brain syndromes. According to the course, further symptoms and the circumstances of appearance, several subtypes can be differentiated: transient global amnesia, posttraumatic amnesia, Korsakow's psychosis, and psychogenic amnesia. Many disorders may cause amnesia. Guidelines for the differentiation of the underlying disorders and therapeutic strategies are discussed.
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PMID:[Amnestic syndrome--research update]. 852 89

Isomers are two or more different substances with the same molecular formula (i.e., the same number of different types of atoms). There are two main types of isomerism: 1) structural isomerism, and 2) steroisomerism. Structural isomers (e.g., enflurane and isoflurane) have different molecular structures, and usually behave like different drugs. Occasionally, structural isomers are interconvertible (i.e., they are tautomers or dynamic isomers); this occurs with the barbiturates and midazolam. Steroisomers have identical structures, but a different configuration or spatial arrangement. Stereiosomerism in drugs is often due to chirality or "handedness"; i.e., the presence of right-handed (R)- and left-handed (S)- forms of drugs which are nonsuperimposable mirror images ("enantiomers"). Approximately 60% of anaesthetic agents are chiral drugs; some of these are administered as single enantiomers. However, many synthetic chiral drugs are equal mixtures of (R)- and (S)-isomers, and there are often important differences in their activity and pharmacokinetics. Halothane, enflurane, and isoflurane are chiral drugs with different anaesthetic potencies. Similar differences occur with intravenous anaesthetics; thus, (S) (+)-ketamine causes fewer psychotic emergence reactions, less agitated behaviour, and better intraoperative amnesia and analgesia than its enantiomer. Some local anaesthetics are administered as chiral mixtures; the (S)-isomers have a longer action because of enhanced vasoconstriction. (S)-prilocaine is more slowly metabolized than its enantiomer, while (S)-bupivacaine may produce less cardiotoxicity than (R)-bupivacaine. These differences suggest that some anaesthetic drugs (particularly ketamine and chiral local anaesthetics) should be administered as single enantiomers. In recent years, their synthesis has been greatly simplified, and almost all new drugs may soon be introduced in this form.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Isomerism and anaesthetic drugs. 853 53

In 1942, the Norwegian psychiatrist Eitinger drew attention to the fact that acute psychosis may be the presenting and major symptom of primary hyperparathyroidism. A case of this variety is reported. In the course of two months a 77-year old woman developed an acute psychosis characterized by apathy, amnesia, somatic delusions and hallucinations. Initially, the case was misinterpreted as senile dementia. The serum calcium level was 4.3 mmol/l. After parathyroidectomy her mental symptoms were completely relieved.
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PMID:[Acute psychosis--an unusual clinical manifestation of primary hyperparathyroidism]. 863 74

Synaptic plasticity is currently the target of much neurobiological research, because it is thought to play an important role in brain function (particularly memory formation). However, it has attracted little attention from psychiatrists to date despite accumulating evidence that links it to various clinical syndromes, including amnesia and possibly psychosis. The purpose of this article is to present an overview of the two major arms of synaptic plasticity research-theoretical (the field of neural network modeling) and neurobiological (long-term potentiation). Artificial neural networks are a class of theoretical model that has been developed with the aim of understanding how information could, in principle, be represented by large numbers of interconnected and relatively simple units. Over the past few decades, several theoretical accounts of information-processing mechanisms have been developed, and these are briefly reviewed. The principle common to representation formation in nearly all neural networks is that of "associability"-the idea that streams of information are combined by forming, strengthening, or pruning connections between them to form new representations that can later be retrieved. Associability also lies at the heart of psychological theories of information storage in the brain. Research into associability has directed the attention of many experimenters toward the possible biological correlates of such mechanisms. Of particular interest is the recent discovery that some neurons appear to possess connections of modifiable strength. The implications of this finding for psychiatry are discussed in relation to representational disorders such as delusions and amnesia.
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PMID:Modifiable neuronal connections: an overview for psychiatrists. 901 62

It has been suggested that patients undergoing treatment with recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) may develop cognitive impairment. To evaluate these effects, 17 patients with advanced colorectal cancer took part in a randomised, parallel group study of rIL-2 with chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil and leucovorin) and chemotherapy alone. Assessments were carried out daily whilst patients were in hospital and regularly between cycles of treatment using state-of-the-art computerised cognitive assessment, as well as traditional psychometric tests. Rigorous discontinuation criteria were applied to ensure that the effect of time-related variables did not influence the results. One patient developed repeated transient psychotic episodes associated with rIL-2 infusions and another regularly became confused. Computerised cognitive assessments revealed that immunochemotherapy produced significant impairment in various tasks, especially reaction time, picture recognition and vigilance. These effects were not due to sleep deprivation or pyrexia. For most patients, cognitive functioning was restored to the baseline level within 10 days following the cessation of rIL-2. In conclusion, during infusions of rIL-2, some patients experience severe confusion and amnesia which resembles some of the major cognitive impairments associated with dementias such as Alzheimer's disease. Computerised cognitive assessment using the Cognitive Drug Research system provides a feasible, sensitive and reliable method of evaluating cognitive changes in patients with cancer. It could usefully be included in quality of life assessments in clinical trials where treatment-related cognitive changes need to be evaluated.
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PMID:The cognitive effects of recombinant interleukin-2 (rIL-2) therapy: a controlled clinical trial using computerised assessments. 903 10


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