Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mental-health service utilization among elderly people has been shown to be low relative to younger age groups. This study was done to determine the current proportion of elderly persons served in a university-affiliated psychiatry outpatient clinic, and to better characterize elderly patients who receive specialized mental-health care in this setting. The proportion of visits from elderly patients (aged 60 and over) was found to be 16%. Demographic and clinical characteristics of a sample of 140 consecutive geriatric patients evaluated at the clinic were obtained. The data revealed that the patients had a mean age of 74.7+/-7.5 (SD) years, and were mostly female (72.1%) and white (78.6%). Surprisingly, the age distribution was found to be bell shaped, with a small upper tail. The three most prevalent psychiatric diagnoses were
depression
(56.4%), dementia (35.7%), and substance use disorder (20%). Overall, 59.3% of geriatric patients had a history of prior psychiatric treatment. Females were significantly more likely than males to have a psychiatric history (69.3% vs. 33.3%, P = .0001). Among patients with a psychiatric history, females were more likely to have a current diagnosis of major depression (P = .0006), while males were more likely to have a current substance use disorder (P = .03). The prevalence of dementia increased with each successive decade above 60, while the occurrence of bipolar and
adjustment disorders
was confined to younger geriatric patients. Elderly patients receiving psychiatric treatment in the clinic thus formed a heterogeneous group. Gender, age, and presence of a psychiatric history were all associated with differences in prevalence and distribution of various mental disorders in this geriatric psychiatry outpatient clinic.
...
PMID:Characteristics of persons utilizing a geriatric psychiatry outpatient clinic. 945 78
A one year cohort of 67 overdose attempts among youth (15-24 years) was examined as part of a case control study. The prevalence rate of 105 per 100,000 population is lower than reported rates in the West but higher than those for the region. The majority of attempters were females and nationals who used paracetamol, and their suicide intent was low. Thirteen percent visited a helping agency in the previous week and 18% in the previous month. The most common difficulties preceding the overdoses were problems with parents, school or work, social isolation and problems with boyfriends, or girlfriends respectively.
Adjustment disorder
was the most common diagnosis followed by
depression
. A seasonal variation was noted with 46% of the cases occurring in the summer months. The implications of these findings with respect to future policy making and prevention were discussed.
...
PMID:Overdose among youth in Bahrain: psycho-social characteristics, contact with helping agencies and problems. 951 74
About 1/3 of patients with chest pain undergoing coronary arteriography (CA) have no coronary artery disease (CAD). Individuals with non-CAD chest pain may be younger and more likely to be female; they may express higher degrees of neuroticism. Are those features stable enough to justifi; exclusion from CA if present? To investigate this issue, data on psychodiagnostic parameters (
depression
, anxiety, somatic complaints) were obtained in patients before this were referred to CA. Inclusion criteria were a chief complaint of chest pain with episodes of angina-like pain at rest, suspicious enough to warrant cardiac catherisation; and no prior history of CAD or other organic heart disease. The sample consisted of 77 patients, recruited from 89 eligible patients. 12 patients were excluded because CA findings were missing for multiple reasons. CA was conducted by Judkins technique. Patients were labeled as CAD (-) if no stenosis were detectable. In 50 (65%) of cases CA findings were positive and in 27 (35%) findings were negative. CAD+ were significantly older (p < 0.05); the superiority in both groups were male. Prevalence of emotional disorders was markedly more pronounced in both groups in comparison to the normal population and to a group of male myocardial infarction survivors. However, those features did not discriminate between the groups. Long acting chest pain was predictive for high degrees of emotional disability (relative risk 5.33; 95% Kl 1.6-61.6; p < 0.012). Chest pain at rest is a major source of anxiety,
depression
and subsequent somatic preoccupation despite its ischaemic or functional origin. It leads to clinically relevant
adjustment disorders
in a significant proportion of chest pain patients and triggers emotional disstress. These factors may thus have less impact on risk stratification than expected.
...
PMID:[Psychological comorbidity in patients with alarming chest pain symptoms]. 953 7
The consultation-liaison (C-L) psychiatry services of seven university teaching hospitals in the United States, Canada, and Australia (the MICRO-CARES Consortium) used a common clinical database to examine 1039 consecutive referrals. A diagnosis of
adjustment disorder
(AD) was made in 125 patients (12.0%); as the sole diagnosis, in 81 (7.8%); and comorbidly with other Axis I and II diagnoses in 44 (4.2%). It had been considered as a rule-out diagnosis in a further 110 (10.6%). AD with depressed mood, anxious mood, or mixed emotions were the commonest subcategories used. AD was diagnosed comorbidly most frequently with personality disorder and organic mental disorder. Sixty-seven patients (6.4%) were assigned a V code diagnosis only. Patients with AD were referred significantly more often for problems of anxiety, coping, and
depression
; had less past psychiatric illness; and were rated as functioning better--all consistent with the construct of AD as a maladaptation to a psychosocial stressor. Interventions were similar to those for other Axis I and II diagnoses, in particular, the prescription of antidepressants. Patients with AD required a similar amount of clinical time and resident supervision. It is concluded that AD is an important and time-consuming diagnostic category in C-L psychiatry practice.
...
PMID:Adjustment disorder: a multisite study of its utilization and interventions in the consultation-liaison psychiatry setting. 965 31
Prospective data on 1,360 consecutive inpatients referred to the consultation-liaison psychiatry service of 2 metropolitan general teaching hospitals and diagnoses as having a Depressive Illness Spectrum Disorder were collected by using the MICRO-CARES clinical database system. The distribution of DSM-III-R diagnoses was major depression (MD) 49%; dysthymia (DYS) 15%; organic or substance-induced mood disorder or depressive disorder not otherwise specified (ORG/NOS) 14%; and
adjustment disorder
with depressed mood (AD) 29%s. Antidepressants were prescribed in 59% of the MD cases, 40% of the DYS cases, 36% of the ORG/NOS cases, and 17% of the AD cases. In confirmed MD, antidepressants were prescribed in 69%, and significantly more often in those who were older, female, had a prior history of physical illness, had a neoplasm or a disorder of the nervous or musculoskeletal systems, had higher Axis IV scores, or were referred because of pain or terminal illness. The patients with confirmed MD prescribed antidepressants had a longer length of stay and were referred later than those not prescribed antidepressants. The results illustrate the importance of all the forms of
depression
in consultation-liaison psychiatry and the vigor with which all forms are treated.
...
PMID:Consultation-liaison psychiatrists management of depression. 966 71
It is likely that patients with gynecological cancers are at risk for psychiatric disorders such as major depression and anxiety disorders. However, relatively little attention has been focused on studying these women. We review here papers that report rates and treatment of psychiatric illness in women with gynecological cancer. This small literature suggests that
depression
, anxiety, and
adjustment disorders
do occur with heightened frequency, and appear to worsen over the course of treatment persisting well after the initial diagnosis and therapy. Antidepressants are reported to be effective but compliance is often a problem. Limitations in this literature include a paucity of research specific to gynecological cancers, small sample sizes in reports that do exist, and minimal differentiation between the specific cancers and their rates of
depression
and anxiety. There is a clear need for more clinical and research attention to this at-risk population.
...
PMID:Psychiatric disorders and gynecological oncology: a review of the literature. 971 4
Impairment of social functioning is often associated with
depression
and contributes to an unfavorable course of the disease. Although it must be suspected that both social maladaptation and
depression
could obstruct recovery from somatic diseases, little attention has been paid to their interaction in general hospital patients. To assess social integration in depressive and psychiatrically healthy general hospital in-patients, 250 patients were studied with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), a structured clinical interview, and the Social Interview Schedule (SIS). From clinical interviews, it was established that 16.4% of the patients suffered from depressive disorders (ICD-10). When these patients were compared with patients without psychiatric disorder, only a tendency to social dysfunctioning with regard to social management and satisfaction with social situations was observed. But when the depressive sample was divided into three diagnostic groups (depressive episode, dysthymia, depressive
adjustment disorder
), significant social impairments were found in the dysthymia subsample. Family and other interpersonal problems were most prominent. When
depression
preceded somatic illness, a higher level of impairment was observed. The majority of dysthymia patients suffered from long-term somatic diseases, often cancer, which were preceded by
depression
. The results of this study single out a small group of patients who seem to be at an extensive risk of chronic psychiatric and somatic illnesses and should therefore be a focus of consultation/liaison (C/L) interventions.
...
PMID:Depression and social functioning in general hospital in-patients. 975 84
Unrecognized, untreated and undertreated depressive disorders incur inordinate human and economic costs, despite the availability of an exclusive array of clinical interventions. The aim of this study was to identify cases of masked
depression
in primary health care, employing a two-stage design. In the first stage, involving a study of 442 patients, the prevalence of recognized
depression
was 1.8%. In the second step, 62 patients from stage 1 were investigated further because of their high score on somatization tendency. In total, 41 of the 62 patients were found to have a mood disorder according to DSM-III-R, i.e. a major depressive disorder or dysthymia. Two patients were found to have already had a diagnosis of major depression assigned to them in stage 1, but they were joined by 13 more patients. A further 26 patients were found to be suffering from dysthymia, nine had
adjustment disorders
with depressed mood, and 12 patients showed no signs of depressed mood. For the group suffering from a current episode of major depression or dysthymia, the prevalence rate increased to 11.7% in the initial total population after stage 2. The diagnostic category with the highest rate of depressed patients was 'musculoskeletal diseases'. Patients with masked
depression
had higher scores for alexithymia and psychasthenia than depressed patients who were directly diagnosed.
...
PMID:Depressive disorders among somatizing patients in primary health care. 976 4
We applied a computationally practical form of probit analysis for multiple response variables to data on early childhood development of four psychiatric disorders: disruptive disorders (DD-attention deficit disorders, oppositional defiant disorder, conduct disorder);
adjustment disorders
(ADJ); emotional disorders (ED-all anxiety disorders,
depression
); and other DSM-III-R Axis I disorders (OTHER). In addition to estimating the intercept slope and higher order polynomial terms for each age versus diagnosis regression, we estimated simultaneously the correlation among the four diagnostic categories. We then took into account the correlation found among these four diagnostic categories when testing the hypothesis of no age effect, which would have been ignored in a piecemeal univariate approach. Regression lines for diagnostic prevalence indicate a linear increase for OTHER disorders, and a curvilinear increase for ED. We then used expected frequencies of individual response patterns (that is, the 2(4) = 16 possible diagnostic combinations) in obtaining more precise estimates of diagnostic comorbidity and its relation to age. We further generalize the Bock and Gibbons model to alternative specification of the random-effects distribution (that is, they assumed multivariate normality), illustrate how one can estimate the random-effects distribution empirically, and study the robustness of parameter estimates to specification of the random-effects distribution.
...
PMID:Emergence of childhood psychiatric disorders: a multivariate probit analysis. 981 40
The Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ) was designed to detect clinical depression in children and adolescents. Our aim was to investigate the relationship between symptom scores obtained using the short-version MFQ and psychiatric disorders in a non-clinical sample. Seventy-eight parents and 71 twins, who had completed the MFQ, were interviewed separately using a semistructured diagnostic interview, the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment. Parent-rated MFQ scores (MFQ-P) were found to distinguish those with ICD-10 (point biserial correlation = 0.345) and DSM-III-R
depression
(point biserial correlation = 0.369) from non-depressed cases. MFQ-P scores also differentiated depressed cases from those with 'other psychiatric diagnoses' (any anxiety disorder, oppositional defiant disorder and conduct disorder, hyperkinetic disorder/attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and
adjustment disorder
/post-traumatic disorder). The MFQ-P at the chosen cut-off point showed a sensitivity of 0.75 and specificity of 0.73 for an ICD-10 diagnosis of
depression
and a sensitivity of 0.86 and specificity of 0.87 for DSM-III-R
depression
. The number of self-rated reports (MFQ-C) was small, but overall the results suggest that self-rated MFQ scores may show less specificity. The MFQ-C at the selected cut-off point showed a sensitivity of 0.6 and specificity of 0.61 for ICD-10
depression
, and a sensitivity of 0.75 and specificity of 0.74 for DSM-III-R
depression
.
...
PMID:Validity of the shortened Mood and Feelings Questionnaire in a community sample of children and adolescents: a preliminary research note. 985 42
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10