Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors developed reliable clinical rating scales to compare 35 children with school phobia and their families with a matched sample of children with other neuroses and their families. Twice as many school phobic children as children with other neuroses showed excessive separation anxiety, dependency, and depression. Although a mutually hostile-dependent interaction was found in most of the families of children with school phobia, the development of school phobia appeared to be dependent on defects in character development in the children as well. The authors discuss the etiological significance of the almost universal parental pathology and family malfunction for both groups of children.
...
PMID:School phobia and other childhood neuroses: a systematic study of the children and their families. 114 63

Anxiety and depression are often clinically associated in children, but are very different in term of effect and symptoms. Family studies favor the hypothesis of a common diathesis for these disorders. Parental history of major depressive and/or anxiety disorders increase the risk of mood and anxiety disorders in children. At the present time, biological studies have not determined any biochemical conclusion for these disorders. It should be noted that although imipramine is efficient in both depressive disorder and separation anxiety, this does not implicate a common physiopathologic basis.
...
PMID:[Considerations on respective roles of anxiety and depressive disorders in children]. 166 4

During the past two decades psychopharmacologists have made considerable strides in establishing the safety and efficacy of psychotropic drug therapy for childhood behavior disorders. Most of the research has focused on children with disruptive behavior disorders, autism, or mental retardation, but more recently other disorders such as depression, obsessive compulsive disorder, separation anxiety (school refusal), and Tourette syndrome are also receiving attention. Psychopharmacotherapy has often been a matter of controversy, with most issues pertaining to either the appropriateness of medication (e.g., rationales for treatment, alternative interventions, toxicity, iatrogenic effects) or inadequacies of clinical management (e.g., availability of services, drug assessment procedures, limitations of research). This article presents a brief overview of the safety and efficacy of psychotropic drugs and the issues associated with their use in clinical settings.
...
PMID:Clinical issues in child and adolescent psychopharmacology. 177 69

Lack of donor availability has heightened our awareness of the need for suitable long-term management of heart failure in patients awaiting heart transplantation. Frequently patients become dependent on intravenous inotropic agents despite attempts to discontinue these agents. This can lead to prolonged hospitalizations, separation anxiety and depression in families, high hospitalization costs, and poor quality of life. Between June 1987 and April 1988 three patients awaiting heart transplantation at the University of Cincinnati Hospital were sent home while receiving constant intravenous infusion of dobutamine. All three patients had had prolonged hospitalizations and were unable to be weaned from dobutamine without clinical compromise. The patients were New York Heart Association functional class III to IV, had cardiac indices between 1.5 to 2.13 L/min/m2, cardiac output less than 4.0 L/min, pulmonary capillary wedge pressures 17 to 27 mm Hg, and left ventricular ejection fraction less than 20% in two of the patients (idiopathic cardiomyopathy), and 30% in the third patient who was awaiting retransplantation (refractory repeated acute rejections). Dobutamine was infused by means of a constant-rate portable cassette pump at 3.17 micrograms/kg/min in patient 1, 10 micrograms/kg/min in patient 2, and 5 micrograms/kg/min in patient 3. A critical care home health nursing agency was used for follow-up home care. All three patients had central lines placed before discharge from the hospital. Each patient was instructed in proper care of the central line and infusion pump and was able to demonstrate accurate technique before being discharged home. Complications were minimal and were related to central line placement. No patient required rehospitalization for complications. No wound infections were reported.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Home intravenous dobutamine therapy in patients awaiting heart transplantation. 235 73

We investigated the prevalence of DSM-III disorders in 792 children aged 11 years from the general population and found an overall prevalence of disorder of 17.6% with a sex ratio (boys-girls) of 1.7:1. The most prevalent disorders were attention deficit, oppositional, and separation anxiety disorders, and the least prevalent were depression and social phobia. Conduct disorder, overanxious disorder, and simple phobia had intermediate prevalences. Pervasive disorders, reported by more than one source, had an overall prevalence of 7.3%. Examination of background behavioral data disclosed that children identified at 11 years as having multiple disorders had a history of behavior problems since 5 years of age on parent and teacher reports. Fifty-five percent of the disorders occurred in combination with one or more other disorders, and 45% as a single disorder.
...
PMID:DSM-III disorders in preadolescent children. Prevalence in a large sample from the general population. 243 48

Imipramine is an established treatment for anxiety in adults. Some evidence also exists that it may be beneficial in children. Because of the frequent co-occurrence of anxiety and affective symptomatology in asthmatic children, a pilot study was undertaken to obtain clinical observations on the effects of imipramine on symptoms of asthma as well as those of separation anxiety and depression in children suffering from intractable asthma. The pilot trial was terminated because of medical complications after 6 patients participated.
...
PMID:Use of imipramine in children with intractable asthma and psychiatric disorders: a warning. 264 63

Plasma cortisol concentrations were determined every 20 min for 24 h, in a nonstressful environment, among 48 rigorously assessed, mostly outpatient, drug-free adolescent subjects during an episode of major depression (MDD) and among 40 normal adolescent subjects. There were no significant differences in the 24-h mean, peak, or nadir, or the time of the nocturnal rise, in plasma cortisol in the 2 groups. Analyses of different subgroups of MDD adolescents according to suicidality, severity of depression, separation anxiety, psychotic subtype, endogenicity, duration of episode, and sex also revealed no significant group differences. Only one adolescent (with MDD) was identified clearly as a hypersecretor of cortisol. These results indicate that abnormalities of spontaneous cortisol secretion are an unusual finding among adolescents with major depression when studied in a nonstressful environment.
...
PMID:Cortisol secretion in adolescents with major depressive disorder. 276 57

We describe the development of a self-report measure (the Interpersonal Sensitivity Measure or IPSM). The IPSM generates a total score as well as five sub-scale scores: interpersonal awareness, need for approval, separation anxiety, timidity and fragile inner-self. Its reliability is demonstrated by high internal consistency in two separate groups, and by stability in scores over time in a non-clinical group. Studies of a clinical group of depressives showed change in scale scores following improvement in the depressive state, suggesting some sensitivity of the measure to mood state. The IPSM appears related to measures of neuroticism and to low self-esteem but not to a modified concept of neuroticism, emotional arousability. The constructs contributing to interpersonal sensitivity and their relevance to depression are considered. Some preliminary findings of higher scores in depressives compared to non-depressives are reported.
...
PMID:Development of a scale to measure interpersonal sensitivity. 280 46

Data are presented on risk factors for childhood psychopathology derived from a study of an island-wide probability sample of children in Puerto Rico aged 4 through 16 years. Analyses estimated the effects of 12 demographic, health, and family variables on the probability of being a "case," using two different operational definitions of caseness, as well as on the probability of receiving the diagnoses of oppositional disorder, attention deficit disorder, separation anxiety, depression, functional enuresis, and adjustment disorder. When compared to other findings, the results from these analyses indicate that the relationship between maladjustment and the risk factors evaluated does not appear to be culturally specific.
...
PMID:Risk factors for maladjustment in Puerto Rican children. 280 53

Differences between a clinical sample of younger (ages 5 to 11) and older (ages 12 to 19) children meeting DSM-III criteria for overanxious disorder (OAD) were examined. Younger and older children were compared in terms of (1) the rates of OAD diagnoses occurring in the two age groups, (2) sociodemographic characteristics, (3) symptom expression, (4) association with other forms of maladjustment, and (5) self-reported anxiety and depression. The prevalence of OAD diagnoses and sociodemographic characteristics did not differ. Although younger and older OAD children showed similar rates of most specific DSM-III OAD symptoms, older children presented with a higher total number of overanxious symptoms than younger children. Older children more frequently exhibited a concurrent major depression or simple phobia, whereas younger OAD children more commonly had coexisting separation anxiety or attention deficit disorders. Older OAD children reported significantly higher levels of anxiety and depression on self-report measures. Findings indicated that the expression of OAD varies by developmental level.
...
PMID:Overanxious disorder: an examination of developmental differences. 322 Oct 32


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>