Gene/Protein
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Drug
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Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most common nutritional problems in nursing home residents are weight loss and concomitant protein energy undernutrition. Although the causes of weight loss in these patients can usually be treated, they are rarely identified in the nursing home.
Depression
and adverse drug effects are the most common causes of weight loss. We discuss the appropriate use of feeding tubes in the nursing home and the early use of enteral feeding to prevent the development of severe protein energy undernutrition. Vitamin deficiencies, especially folate and pyridoxine deficiencies, frequently develop in nursing home residents. Hip fractures are often associated with vitamin D deficiency. Trace mineral deficiencies (for example, zinc deficiency) can aggravate immune deficiency and slow wound healing. Inadequate fluid intake leads to
dehydration
, hypotension, and, in persons with diabetes mellitus, hyperosmolarity. Finally, food intake itself can cause postprandial hypotension (which in turn may precipitate falls), produce electrolyte shifts, and result in aspiration pneumonia. Physical activity programs are an important component of nursing home care that may have an effect on nutritional status, and simple, cost-effective programs may be as beneficial as high-technology programs. Careful attention to the nutritional intake of nursing home residents is both a clinical and a quality-of-life issue.
...
PMID:Nutritional issues in nursing home care. 748 69
This article provides a clinically-oriented overview of palliative care for patients with AIDS. Indicators of decreased survival time are divided into categories of infections/illnesses, clinical signs and symptoms, immunological and serological markers, and psychosocial factors. Primary symptoms in AIDS are discussed according to etiology and treatment. However, treatments of opportunistic infections per se are not directly addressed in this article. Problems discussed include pain, confusion,
depression
and anxiety, fatigue, fever, dyspnea, nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, wasting, and
dehydration
. The article also briefly addresses clinical and ethical questions and challenges presented by AIDS to hospice or palliative care providers, and the various stages of HIV infection.
...
PMID:Palliative care for patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 749 35
An 8-month-old female Vietnamese pot-bellied pig was examined because of a 48-hour history of anorexia and signs of
depression
. Hypothermia,
dehydration
, pronounced respiratory effort, and muffled heart sounds were detected. Abdominal ultrasonography revealed ascites and hepatic congestion. Echocardiography revealed pericardial effusion and fibrinous pericarditis. Ultrasound-guided pericardiocentesis was diagnostic and therapeutic. Cytologic examination of pericardial and peritoneal fluid revealed degenerated neutrophils and intra-and extracellular gram-positive cocci. On microbial culture of pericardial and peritoneal fluid specimens, moderate growth of a beta-hemolytic Streptococcus sp of group G was observed. After initial treatment corrected hypothermia and
dehydration
, the pig was treated with sulfadiazine/sulfamerazine/sulfamethazine and oxytetracycline for 30 days. Echocardiographic examination 3 months after the initial examination revealed resolution of the pericardial effusion and fibrinous pericarditis.
...
PMID:Streptococcal fibrinous pericarditis and peritonitis in a Vietnamese pot-bellied pig. 777 50
Salt toxicosis was confirmed in a flock of 20,000 thirteen-week-old tom turkeys experiencing an increase in mortality. Clinical signs included polydipsia, diarrhea, ataxia, incoordination, tremors that progressed to
depression
, sternal and lateral recumbency accompanied by torticollis, and death. Mortality over a 5-day period was 6.7%. Necropsy lesions included pallor and
dehydration
of pectoral muscles, hepatic congestion, and fluid-filled small and large intestines. Microscopic lesions consisted of bilaterally symmetrical areas of necrosis within the cerebral hemispheres accompanied by vascular congestion and edema, as well as hyalinization of the glomerular capillary walls of the kidney and eosinophilic granular casts in the renal tubules. Average salt concentration in the feed from affected houses with 8.04%.
...
PMID:Salt toxicosis in commercial turkeys. 779 77
Postoperative depression has been reported in adults undergoing open heart surgery and mastectomy. Tonsillectomy is a commonly performed procedure and can be associated with significant morbidity including pain, difficulty swallowing,
dehydration
, and bleeding. While adults may be able to express their feelings about the postoperative course, children often are unable to express themselves. Because postoperative
depression
may manifest itself in unusual behavior that is dismissed as "expected," it may go unrecognized. We present three case reports in which the child demonstrated signs of
depression
following tonsillectomy. We believe that
depression
following tonsillectomy occurs more frequently than has been recognized. We describe the diagnosis and management of posttonsillectomy
depression
to increase the otolaryngologist's awareness of this entity.
...
PMID:Depression in children after tonsillectomy. 780 13
Experiments with 386 dogs and 365 cats revealed that, irrespective of the cause of clinical death, the animals develop in the postresuscitation period phasic changes of the systemic and local circulation manifesting by a short-term increase of volumetric perfusion, followed by its decrease and gradual normalization. The most favorable course of repair processes was observed after short (3 to 5 min) hyperperfusion with the supradiaphragmatic fraction increased by 25-30%. Development of the hypoperfusion syndrome at the first stage after resuscitation (3 to 60 min) is determined by the
depression
of cardiac contractility. Cardiac output at this stage is maintained by moderate cardiotonic therapy (dopamine). Subsequent reduction of volumetric perfusion during 1 to 9 h of the postresuscitation period is caused mainly by the hydro-ionic disorders leading to development of hypovolemia and the hyperviscosity syndrome associated with it. Systemic and local circulation is normalized at this stage by volemic (polygluquin),
dehydration
(mannitol), antistressor (dalargin), and membrane-stabilizing (lidocaine) therapy. After 24 h, during the phase of circulation normalization, it is advisable to administer membrane-stabilizing and detoxifying, and, if necessary (in case of a myocardial infarction), antiarrhythmic therapy.
...
PMID:[Main principles of correction of blood circulation disorders in the early postresuscitation period]. 789 75
Various marine fishes, amphibians, and reptiles survive at temperatures several degrees below the freezing point of their body fluids by virtue of adaptive mechanisms that promote freeze avoidance or freeze tolerance. Freezing is avoided by a colligative
depression
of the blood freezing point, supercooling of the body fluids, or the biosynthesis of unique antifreeze proteins that inhibit the propagation of ice within body fluids. Conversely, freeze tolerance is an adaptation for the survival of tissue freezing under ecologically relevant thermal and temporal conditions that is conferred by the biosynthesis of permeating carbohydrate cryoprotectants and an extensive
dehydration
of tissues and organs. Such cryoprotective responses, invoked by the onset of freezing, mitigate the osmotic stress associated with freeze-concentration of cytoplasm, attendant metabolic perturbations, and physical damage. Cryomedical research has historically relied on mammalian models for experimentation even though endotherms do not naturally experience subfreezing temperatures. Some vertebrate ectotherms have "solved" not only the problem of freezing individual tissues and organs, but also that of simultaneously freezing all organ systems. An emerging paradigm in cryomedicine is the application of principles governing natural cold hardiness to the development of protocols for the cryopreservation of mammalian tissues and organs.
...
PMID:Survival mechanisms of vertebrate ectotherms at subfreezing temperatures: applications in cryomedicine. 789 3
A T-cannula was fitted permanently into the ileum of ten mature ponies to quantify the role of the prececal and postileal segments of the digestive tract in equine nutrition studies. The ponies were anesthetized, positioned in left lateral recumbency, and the distal small intestine was exteriorized through a right paralumbar incision. A silastic T-cannula was inserted through a 2-cm longitudinal incision into the lumen of the ileum, on the antimesenteric surface, and sutured to the ileum. The stem of the cannula was exteriorized through a 2-cm circular skin incision, 6 cm caudal to the 16th rib. Nine ponies were alive with functional cannulas after six months. Primary complications associated with cannulation of the ileum were clinical signs of
depression
and
dehydration
produced by leakage of intestinal contents around the stem of the cannula. These complications were resolved with fluid and electrolyte therapy.
...
PMID:Technique for long-term ileal cannulation in ponies. 795 19
Cytauxzoonosis is a rapidly and highly fatal disease in cats that is caused by the protozoan Cytauxzoon felis, which may be transmitted by Ixodid ticks (Dermacentor variabilis) from parasitemic bobcats (Lynx rufus). During an 8-year period, cytauxzoonosis was diagnosed in 8 cats, 7 cats within 14 months. Risk factors for these cats were warm weather, access to a wooded environment, and exposure to ticks. The most consistent clinical signs were acute lethargy, anorexia, decreased response to external stimuli (
depression
), icterus,
dehydration
, and capillary refill time > 2 seconds. Pertinent clinicopathologic findings were normocytic normochromic anemia, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia; high serum concentrations of total bilirubin and glucose, low serum concentrations of albumin and potassium, high serum alanine transaminase activity; and, bilirubinuria. Confirmation of cytauxzoonosis was made by cytologic or histologic identification of the C felis organism. Splenic, lymph node, and bone marrow aspirates can provide an antemortem diagnosis when the number of parasitized erythrocytes is low on blood smears. Supportive treatment of 6 cats was temporarily palliative in some, but all 8 cats either died (3) or were euthanatized (5) when they became moribund. Survival time from observed onset of illness to death was < 5 days. Necropsy of 4 cats revealed predominately pulmonary involvement with venous congestion. Histologic examination revealed venous occlusion by parasitized mononuclear phagocytes in all tissue specimens, but only minimal inflammatory infiltrates.
...
PMID:Cytauxzoonosis in cats: eight cases (1985-1992). 796 Oct 73
Bilateral electrolytic lesions of the lateral hypothalamic (LH) area in Wistar rats result in a time-dependent blood NK cytotoxicity changes as measured by the 51Cr-release (for entire cell population) and agarose (for a single-cell) assays. NK activity against YAC-1 and K-562 cells shifts from
depression
through enhancement to another
depression
on the 2nd, 5th and 21st post-lesion day, respectively, as compared to both LH sham-operated animals and the pre-lesion baselines. This effect is not attributable to malnutrition and
dehydration
resulting from ingestive impairments evoked by LH lesions. No significant change in NK cytotoxicity was found after destruction of the medial hypothalamus (MH). The results indicate that LH, under normal conditions, which may be considered as a dynamogenic and stressogenic hypothalamic area is essential for proper regulations of NK cytotoxicity at both population and single-cell level.
...
PMID:Electrolytic lesions of the lateral hypothalamus influence peripheral blood NK cytotoxicity in rats. 796 83
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