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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The response of hepatic and haemotopoetic functions to treatment with praziquantel was studied using healthy and schistosome-infected mice. Female CF1 mice harbouring an 18 week old infection with Schistosoma mansoni and healthy uninfected mice of the same age were orally treated with 1 x 250 mg praziquantel/kg. The respective uninfected controls received the vehicle only. Blood samples were taken one, five, 14 and 28 days after treatment. Parameters studied were: activity of GOT, GPT and AP, concentration of glucose, blood clotting time, haemoglobin content, erythrocyte and leucocyte counts, PCV and body weight. The data were analyzed to reveal the effect of the three independent variables involved: infection, treatment and time after treatment.
Infection
of mice with S. mansoni for 18 weeks resulted in a
depression
of body weight, in a decrease of plasma GOT activity and of PCV and in increases of plasma GPT and AP activities, leucocyte counts and clotting time. Plasma glucose concentrations remained unaffected. The effects of treament with praziquantel were confined to the infected group. Changes attributable to the variable time were also more pronounced or even restricted to the infected treated group. Treatment of infected mice with praziquantel resulted in a temporary elevation of plasma GOT and GPT activities on Day 1 after treatment. Values had returned to normal on Day 5. Treatment further resulted in a slight but prolonged elevation of AP activities, a high leucocyte count on Day 5 after treatment and a normalization of the underweight and anaemic state of the infected mice. The nature of the effects observed after treatment with praziquantel is discussed in the light of corresponding data on the effect of treatment with hycanthone and SQ 18.506 in schistosome infected mice and Mastomys. It is concluded that the changes observed can be regarded as secondary, reflecting host responses to damaged parasites and healing processes.
...
PMID:Effect of praziquantel on clinical-chemical parameters in healthy and schistosome-infected mice. 743 2
The author posits that overpopulation is a problem that can be solved only with an understanding of the natural environment and its interactions with people. The formation of a national Indian planning commission for population control is viewed as necessary for motivating all people to reduce population size. More statistics are needed in India on environmental measures and population. Man is part of nature, but not a master of nature. Water-borne diseases occur after flooding and earthquakes and when the drinking water supply is contaminated. Weather forecasting would be useful in preventing these diseases. Construction sites are reservoirs of
infectious diseases
and affect the natural environment. Environmental conditions must be monitored. Monitoring of environmental sanitation will help in forecasting epidemics and in curbing the negative affects on human physical, mental, and social well-being. Man alters the environment through such activities as urbanization, industrialization, deforestation, construction of dams and irrigation channels, and use of pesticides and chemical fertilizers. New negative effects are occurring. Environmental degradation lowers economic status, which in turn contributes to poverty. Low income populations are more prone to crime, drug abuse, alcoholism,
depression
, and violence. The health status of an individual, community, or nation is a product of man's internal environment and the external natural environment, which can be physical, biological, and social. The biological environment includes viruses and disease producing agents, which struggle for their survival. The social environment includes customs, values, socioeconomic status, religion, standard of living, and political factors. Natural ecological regulation was suspended when man made technological advances. Scientific knowledge does not yet hold all the answers. Pollution is the result of progress in technology. Agricultural development has negative effects on the environment. Large population size contributes to the contamination of air, water, and agricultural areas. Demographic transition has been uneven in India.
...
PMID:Need and reasons for population control. 765 63
The increasing diversity of New York's Latino population creates complex challenges for the health care provider and planner, such as how to plan for divergent health risks, disease patterns, and health behaviors. However, most research on Latinos has been done in the southwestern United States. This paper reviews the epidemiologic data published since 1980 on Latino groups in New York State. The review covers the following areas: maternal and child health,
infectious diseases
,
depression
, tobacco and substance use, chronic diseases, neoplasms, and mortality statistics. We compare New York data with studies done in other areas of the United States. We identify serious methodological shortcomings in the epidemiological assessment of New York's Latino population, including (1) imprecise definition of "Latino," (2) misclassification, (3) census undercount of minority groups, and (4) lack of data on socioeconomic status. We argue that the epidemiological and cultural diversity of Latino groups demands the inclusion of such variables as place of birth, length of stay, and language preference in research and service statistics. This would facilitate targeted program planning and help to determine environmental, sociopolitical, behavioral, and genetic influences on diseases.
...
PMID:Available epidemiologic data on New York's Latino population: a critical review of the literature. 788 93
Evidence from the house mouse (Mus) suggests that the extreme diversity of genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) results from three different forms of selection involving
infectious disease
(pestilence), inbreeding (incest) and MHC-based mating (sexual) preferences. MHC-based disassortative mating preferences are presumed to have evolved because they reduce homozygosity throughout the genome, and particularly within loci linked to the MHC. Progeny derived from such disassortative matings would enjoy increased fitness because of both reduced levels of inbreeding
depression
and increased resistance to
infectious disease
arising from their increased MHC heterozygosity.
...
PMID:Evolution of MHC genetic diversity: a tale of incest, pestilence and sexual preference. 812 7
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) was until the early 1980s among the most frequent causes of viral induced central-nervous
infectious diseases
in Austria. Since 1981 the vaccination was forced by intensive media campaigns. Aim of this study was to investigate the effects of the media campaigns and to evaluate them under health economic criteria. The number of hospitalized TBE-cases declines from 1981 to 1990, the linear trend shows a reduction from 427 to 109. If the linear trend from 1971 to 1980 would have continued the respective number in 1990 would have been 585 cases. Thus the model shows that from 1981 to 1990 more than 50% or 2,690 out of 5,368 possible cases are prohibited, from 1991 to 2000 based on the 1990 vaccination rate approximately 85% or 500 cases annually. In the age group 7 to 14 years the proportion of protected exposed is almost 97%. The loss of quality of life is higher than represented by the inpatient statistics. Many of the TBE victims have chronic impairments, mainly due to paresis and
depression
. Based on the 1990 cost data economic benefits for the social insurance companies in the decade 1981 to 1990 are AS 147 millions for inpatient care, respectively AS 108 millions for loss of productivity and AS 77 millions for early retirement, resulting in total benefits of AS 331 millions. The estimated benefits for 1991 to 2000 based on 1990 cost data are AS 270 millions for inpatient care, AS 200 millions for loss of productivity, and AS 368 for early retirement (total AS 828 millions).
...
PMID:[Health economics of early summer meningoencephalitis in Austria. Effects of a vaccination campaign 1981 to 1990]. 814 1
The results of 100 consecutive autopsy studies performed since the introduction and use of cyclosporine (1984 to 1991) in patients who died less than 2.5 months after cardiac transplantation were analysed to try to prevent this type of lethal damage. The lesions were complex but the causes of death may be classified as follows: 44 infections (20 aspergillosis, with 13 septicaemias and 7 predominantly pulmonary complications, 15 severe lung infections, 9 other infections including 7 pyogenic mediastino-pericarditis), 12 acute myocardial rejects, 14 pulmonary arteriolitis reflecting the fact that pulmonary resistances affect the results of cardiac transplantation, 13 non-infectious pericarditis, 17 immediate postoperative deaths (incompetent graft, DIVC). In the discussion, the authors underline the importance of pericardial damage, the direct cause of death in 13 cases but also present in most cases of infection when sometimes clinically confused with the diagnosis of "acute reject". Acute pancreatitis (over 10% of cases) were often labelled "septicaemic shock". Pulmonary involvement is one of the commonest complications related to infection and changes due to passive pulmonary hypertension related to the causal preoperative disease, by silent pulmonary embolism during the 3 months of cardiac failure before surgery and DIVC.
Infection
was the cause of death in nearly half of the early fatalities, and aspergillosis was particularly common whereas systematic prevention with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine has eliminated pneumocystosis for example. The management of immuno-
depression
varies from centre to centre and this is also a factor in the incidence of anatomical complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Early fatal lesions after cardiac transplantation. Results of 100 autopsies]. 833 96
It is widely known that the clearance of drugs is often compromised during episodes of
infectious disease
via a down-regulation of cytochrome P450 (P450) at a pre-translational step in enzyme synthesis. Etiocholanolone (ETC), a potent inflammatory agent, induces fever in humans and causes a decrease in the clearance of certain drugs that are metabolized by P450. On this basis it is widely believed that the fever per se rather than the immune modulation that occurs during infections may have a major role in
depression
of microsomal P450 enzymes during viral infections in humans. In the present study, we demonstrated that although ETC did not induce hyperthermia in mice, it still evoked a
depression
of the levels of P450 in hepatic microsomes. Ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD) was also inhibited significantly when hepatic microsomes were incubated with various concentrations of ETC in vitro. P450 levels and EROD activities remained unchanged following hyperthermia that was induced by a non-inflammatory procedure using 2,4-dinitrophenol. Provided the response in rodents is similar to humans, these results indicate that the
depression
of drug biotransformation by ETC in humans is more likely to be caused by the direct effects of this agent or other mechanisms rather than by the fever it produces. This may suggest that the loss of drug metabolism in humans during infections is due to the activation of host defence responses rather than to the febrile nature of the illness.
...
PMID:Modulatory effect of hyperthermia on hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450 in mice. 834 53
There have been numerous reports of altered drug clearance during episodes of viral infection and during the clinical use of recombinant interferons, but there have been very few reports regarding the effect of active bacterial infections on cytochrome P450-mediated metabolism. The objective of this study was to determine the mechanism by which the Gram-positive bacteria Listeria monocytogenes causes a
depression
of cytochrome P450-mediated biotransformation in mice. After induction with beta-napthoflavone, hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450 levels were reduced by 40% and ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase (EROD) activity was decreased by 65% in mice infected for 48 hr. The loss of EROD activity was accompanied by losses of cytochrome P450IA apoenzyme and cytochrome P450IA mRNA. Listeria infection did not affect total mRNA levels, as determined by oligo(dT)18 hybridization. The time course of these effects demonstrated that an up-regulation of cytochrome P450IA preceded the loss of this isozyme and that changes in cytochrome P450IA mRNA preceded the changes in apoenzyme levels and EROD activity. In hepatic microsomes from uninduced mice, cytochrome P450 levels and the rates of dealkylation of ethoxyresorufin, benzyloxyresorufin, pentoxyresorufin, and aminopyrine were significantly reduced, by 40-60%, after 48 hr of infection. The decrease in aminopyrine-N-demethylase activity was accompanied by a loss of cytochrome P450IID9 mRNA after 48 hr of infection. Cytochrome P450IID9 mRNA levels returned to normal after 96 hr of infection, whereas aminopyrine-N-demethylase activity was still decreased at this time. No up-regulation of cytochrome P450IID9 occured before the loss of this isozyme. The results of this study indicate that the changes in the levels of cytochrome P450IA and cytochrome P450IID9 that are observed during L. monocytogenes infection occur at a pretranslational step. If other bacteria have a similar capacity to depress cytochrome P450 by such a mechanism, then drugs with narrow therapeutic indices should be administered with caution during
infectious diseases
caused by bacteria or viruses.
...
PMID:Mechanism of hepatic cytochrome P450 modulation during Listeria monocytogenes infection in mice. 837 89
Studies have shown an increased vulnerability to psychological distress and a significant prevalence of psychiatric disorders associated with HIV-1 infection, in the range of 30-63%.
Infection
with HIV-1 may also lead to a number of neurological complications, including AIDS dementia complex. The incidence of HIV-1 dementia is approximately 7 per 100 patients per year following the development of AIDS, with up to 20% of HIV-1-infected individuals receiving a diagnosis of HIV-1 dementia before death. A recent study, however, found no significant decline in cognitive functions before AIDS, unless overt dementia is present. To learn more about the prevalence and natural history of psychiatric, neuropsychological, and neurological complications of HIV-1 infection, the World Health Organization (WHO) conducted the WHO Neuropsychiatric AIDS Study. Findings are based upon the cross-sectional study and longitudinal follow-up of 203 subjects recruited in Nairobi, Kenya, and 205 in Kinshasa, Zaire. The author reports finding a significantly higher mean global score on the Montgomery-Asberg
Depression
Rating Scale in symptomatic HIV-seropositive individuals compared to in matched seronegative controls. Overall, the study data suggest that the risk of subtle cognitive deficits may be increased during the asymptomatic stages of HIV-1 infection.
...
PMID:Neuropsychiatric HIV-1 infection study: in Kenya and Zaire cross-sectional phase I and II. 855 77
A 14-year-old girl of Indian origin with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is presented, who was diagnosed at the age of twelve. Antileukemic chemotherapy had to be discontinued after 6 weeks because of persistent high fever and the emergence of liver and spleen abscesses. Serologic and biopsy findings were consistent with disseminated candidiasis; however, a liver biopsy also revealed granulomatous lesions with caseous degeneration. No acid-fast bacilli could be detected. Upon antifungal treatment the patient's condition improved, but fever spells and high inflammatory blood parameters persisted. One year after the diagnosis of AML was established, Mycobacterium avium was cultured from bone marrow aspirates. The patient's cellular immunity was severely compromised at that time as reflected by the marked
depression
of T-lymphocyte counts, in particular of CD4-positive cells. HIV and other lymphotropic virus infections were subsequently excluded. After 5 months of specific treatment the patient recovered from mycobacterial infection and remains in first remission of AML. Opportunistic infections have rarely been diagnosed in oncologic patients to date, while data on T-cell function in AML is sparse. Fever of unknown origin should prompt the search for infectious agents unusual to date in this patient group.
Infection
PMID:First case of disseminated Mycobacterium avium infection following chemotherapy for childhood acute myeloid leukemia. 855 90
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