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 past decades have witnessed an increasing understanding of the psychosomatic aspects of Cushing's disease. Stressful life events were found to precede its onset in controlled studies. Major depression is a common, life-threatening complication of Cushing's syndrome, regardless of its etiology. The presence of depression connotes severity of clinical presentation and entails prognostic value (patients with hypothalamic-pituitary forms are more likely to relapse after successful treatment if they presented with depression). Quality of life of patients with Cushing's disease is seriously compromised. Recovery has a natural course to run and may be considerably influenced by affective responses based on highly individualized psychological assets and liabilities. The psychobiological correlates of Cushing's disease have considerable etiological, clinical and therapeutic implications. Such implications also extend over the nonendocrine forms of major depression.
...
PMID:Psychosomatic aspects of Cushing's disease. 966 61

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis exerts profound, multilevel inhibitory effects on the female reproductive system. Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and CRH-induced proopiomelanocortin peptides inhibit hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone secretion, whereas glucocorticoids suppress pituitary luteinizing hormone and ovarian estrogen and progesterone secretion and render target tissues resistant to estradiol. The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis is thus responsible for the "hypothalamic" amenorrhea of stress, which is also seen in melancholic depression, malnutrition, eating disorders, chronic active alcoholism, chronic excessive exercise, and the hypogonadism of the Cushing syndrome. Conversely, estrogen directly stimulates the CRH gene promoter and the central noradrenergic system, which may explain adult women's slight hypercortisolism; preponderance of affective, anxiety, and eating disorders; and mood cycles and vulnerability to autoimmune and inflammatory disease, both of which follow estradiol fluctuations. Several components of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and their receptors are present in reproductive tissues as autacoid regulators. These include ovarian and endometrial CRH, which may participate in the inflammatory processes of the ovary (ovulation and luteolysis) and endometrium (blastocyst implantation and menstruation), and placental CRH, which may participate in the physiology of pregnancy and the timing of labor and delivery. The hypercortisolism of the latter half of pregnancy can be explained by high levels of placental CRH in plasma. This hypercortisolism causes a transient postpartum adrenal suppression that, together with estrogen withdrawal, may partly explain the depression and autoimmune phenomena of the postpartum period.
...
PMID:Interactions between the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and the female reproductive system: clinical implications. 969 32

Major depression is a common, life-threatening complication of Cushing's syndrome, with no significant differences between pituitary-dependent and -independent forms. Little is known about the clinical correlates of depression; in particular, whether patients with Cushing's disease and major depression show some clinical features that are distinctive compared to those who are not depressed. The occurrence of major depression according to DSM-IV criteria was ascertained in 162 patients with pituitary-dependent Cushing disease. Major depression occurred in 88 of the patients (54%). It was significantly associated with older age, female sex, higher pretreatment urinary cortisol levels, relatively more severe clinical condition, and absence of pituitary adenoma. Patients with Cushing's disease and depression appeared to suffer from a more severe form of illness, both in terms of cortisol production and clinical presentation, compared to those who were not depressed. Because of these connections, the presence of depression is an important clinical feature that should not be neglected. The findings in this study may have implications for a better understanding of the pathophysiological role of depression associated with medical illness.
...
PMID:Clinical correlates of major depression in Cushing's disease. 978 Mar 96

To appraise clinicians of the problems that may be encountered in the diagnosis and management of Cushing's syndrome, we present a case report of a 20-year old female, who was admitted with a recently developed central obesity, ammenorrhea hirsuitism, proximal myopathy and depression. She was found to have multiple striae, thin skin, elevated blood pressure glycosuria and hyperglycaemia. Morning and mid-night plasma cortisol concentrations revealed elevated levels, with a loss of diurnal variation. There was a failure of the normal suppressibility of cortisol secretion by low doses of dexamethasone, while a significant suppression of plasma cortisol concentration was observed with high doses of dexamethasone. There were no significant abnormalities observed in the pituitary fossa on skull radiograph and on the cranial computerised tomographic scan. After a period of stabilisation, she had a bilateral adrenalectomy done, with a histopathological finding of a left adrenal macronodular hyperplasia, while the right adrenal gland was small and friable. There was an uneventful post-operative period, with a gradual return to normality of most of the presenting complaints. The hyperglycaemia and hypertension got controlled without medications, while her menstrual cycles resumed within three months of bilateral adrenalectomy. This case report illustrates that an adrenal-dependent Cushing's syndrome may mimic a pituitary-dependent one, especially as regards the suppressibility of plasma cortisol secretion by high doses of dexamethasone.
...
PMID:Unilateral macronodular adrenal hyperplasia as an unusual cause of Cushing's syndrome--a case study. 1050 70

Neuropsychiatric abnormalities, of which depression is the most common, are frequently associated with Cushing's syndrome. The following paper describes a 58-year-old woman in whom a prolonged psychotic state--schizophrenia-like--was the presenting sign of Cushing's syndrome. The psychiatric symptoms disappeared shortly after the cortisol level has been normalized. Due to the variety of symptoms, both organic and psychiatric, which may occur with Cushing's syndrome, a high suspicion index is advisable. Suspect clinical findings should always prompt the appropriate endocrine work-up.
...
PMID:Cushing's syndrome presenting as a schizophrenia-like psychotic state. 1085 72

The stress system coordinates the adaptive response of the organism to real or perceived stressors. The main components of the stress system are the corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and locus ceruleus-norepinephrine/ autonomic (LC/NE) systems and their peripheral effectors, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, and the limbs of the autonomic system. Activation of the stress system leads to behavioral and peripheral changes that improve the ability of the organism to adjust homeostasis and increase its chances for survival. Thus, CRH and the LC/NE system stimulate arousal and attention, as well as the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system, which is involved in anticipatory and reward phenomena, and the amygdala, which are responsible for the generation of fear. Hypothalamic CRH plays an important role in inhibiting gonadotropin-releasing hormone secretion during stress, while via somatostatin it also inhibits growth hormone, thyrotropin-releasing hormone and thyrotropin secretion, suppressing thus reproduction, growth and thyroid function. Glucocorticoids directly inhibit pituitary gonadotropin, growth hormone and thyrotropin secretion and make the target tissues of sex steroids and growth factors resistant to these substances. In addition, glucocorticoids stimulate hepatic gluconeogenesis, and inhibit or potentiate insulin actions on skeletal muscle and adipose tissue respectively, ultimately promoting visceral adiposity and the metabolic syndrome. Glucocorticoids also have direct effects on the bone, inhibiting osteoblastic activity and causing osteoporosis. Obese subjects with psychiatric manifestations ranging from those of melancholic depression to anxiety with perception of 'uncontrollable' stress, frequently have mild hypercortisolism, while carefully screened obese subjects with no such manifestations are eucortisolemic. The former may have stress-induced glucocorticoid-mediated visceral obesity and metabolic syndrome manifestations, which in the extreme may be called a pseudo-Cushing state that needs to be differentiated from frank Cushing syndrome. Stress-induced hypercortisolism and visceral obesity and their cardiovascular and other sequelae increase the all-cause mortality risk of affected subjects by 2-3-fold and curtail their life expectancy by several years.
...
PMID:The role of stress and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome: neuro-endocrine and target tissue-related causes. 1099 9

An extensive literature stretching back decades has shown that prolonged stress or prolonged exposure to glucocorticoids-the adrenal steroids secreted during stress-can have adverse effects on the rodent hippocampus. More recent findings suggest a similar phenomenon in the human hippocampus associated with many neuropsychiatric disorders. This review examines the evidence for hippocampal atrophy in (1) Cushing syndrome, which is characterized by a pathologic oversecretion of glucocorticoids; (2) episodes of repeated and severe major depression, which is often associated with hypersecretion of glucocorticoids; and (3) posttraumatic stress disorder. Key questions that will be examined include whether the hippocampal atrophy arises from the neuropsychiatric disorder, or precedes and predisposes toward it; whether glucocorticoids really are plausible candidates for contributing to the atrophy; and what cellular mechanisms underlie the overall decreases in hippocampal volume. Explicit memory deficits have been demonstrated in Cushing syndrome, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder; an extensive literature suggests that hippocampal atrophy of the magnitude found in these disorders can give rise to such cognitive deficits.
...
PMID:Glucocorticoids and hippocampal atrophy in neuropsychiatric disorders. 1101 10

Pseudo-Cushing Syndromes (PCS) are a heterogeneous group of disorders, including alcoholism and depression, that share many of the clinical and biochemical features of Cushing's Syndrome (CS). It has been suggested that hypercortisolism of PCS may be the result of increased hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing hormone secretion in the context of a hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis that is otherwise normally constituted. The substantial overlap in clinical features and daily urinary free cortisol levels between several patients with CS and those with PCS can make the differential diagnosis difficult. The most accurate tests in the distinction of CS from alcohol-induced PCS are dexamethasone-CRH and a midnight serum cortisol measurement. In depressed patients, the insulin tolerance test may be useful, although some overlap may exist. This brief review summarises the principal pathophysiological events of PCS and provides a useful strategy for differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Pseudo-Cushing syndrome. Physiopathologic aspects and differential diagnosis]. 1118 91

Cushing's syndrome is caused by a chronic excess of glucocorticoids. A number of psychiatric and psychological disturbances may be associated with the condition, regardless of its aetiology. Major depression is the most common comorbid disorder. Other psychopathological aspects of Cushing's syndrome in adults include mania, anxiety disorders and cognitive dysfunction. The presence of depression connotes a severe clinical presentation and, in patients with hypothalamic-pituitary forms of Cushing's syndrome, is prognostically useful. Inhibitors of corticosteroid production (e.g. ketoconazole, metyrapone, aminoglutethimide), rather than antidepressant drugs, are generally successful in relieving depressive symptoms, as well as other disabling symptoms. These drugs can be used to control symptoms prior to surgical treatment of Cushing's syndrome. Long-standing hypercortisolism may cause some degree of irreversible pathological damage and induce highly individualised affective responses based on each patient's psychological assets and liabilities. As a result, upon normalisation of cortisol levels, treatment may still be required, and should encompass both psychotherapeutic strategies (particularly cognitive-behavioural therapies that have been found to be effective in affective disorders) and psychotropic drug treatment [antidepressants such as tricyclic agents and selective serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) reuptake inhibitors]. In patients with severe anxiety, benzodiazepines (e.g. clonazepam in small doses) may also be helpful.
...
PMID:Psychiatric disorders associated with Cushing's syndrome. Epidemiology, pathophysiology and treatment. 1147 42

A confluence of evidence indicates that prolonged elevation in gluco-corticoid level may result in disturbances of mood and cognition. In Cushing's syndrome, hypersecretion of cortisol is associated with a high incidence of depression, impairment in memory and hippocampal atrophy. Pharmacological usage of glucocorticoids is similarly productive of mood change and memory deficit. In patients with endogenous depression, hypercortisolaemia is associated with cognitive dysfunction and possibly a decrease in hippocampal volume. In each of these conditions, reduction of glucocorticoid level, either through discontinuation of steroid treatment or through usage of agents that block glucocorticoid synthesis, ameliorates the adverse behavioural effects. Traditional antidepressant agents may, in addition, stabilise mood through actions on the hypothalamic-pituitary adrenocortical (HPA) system. Although clinical usage of the currently available antiglucocorticoid drugs is limited by significant adverse side effect profiles, development of drugs specifically targeting the glucocorticoid receptor may lead to innovative strategies in the treatment of mood disorders.
...
PMID:Antiglucocorticoid drugs in the treatment of depression. 1177 85


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