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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A young, crossbred dog with a 13-month history of progressively worsening, recurrent episodes of vomiting, anorexia,
depression
and
dehydration
was diagnosed as having a functional hypomotility disorder of the small intestines. During hospitalisation, the dog's condition improved only when total parenteral nutrition was administered. When fed orally, the dog developed severe gastric dilatation. Intestinal motility was minimal, but was induced by neostigmine. Post mortem findings included dilatation of the duodenum and progressive narrowing of the small bowel up to the ileum. Histopathology revealed various grades of neuronal degeneration and necrosis of the myenteric plexuses throughout the small intestine. Microscopic changes resembled those reported in dysautonomia, but were limited to small intestinal myenteric plexuses. A localised congenital neuronal defect causing a lack of parasympathetic tone is suspected.
...
PMID:Functional intestinal hypomotility in association with neuronal damage in a dog. 909 44
The effects of whole body
dehydration
(up to 40% of total body water lost) or anoxia exposure (up to 2 days under N2 gas) at 5 degrees C on tissue levels of adenosine 3'-5' cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) and the percentage of cAMP-dependent protein kinase present as the free catalytic subunit (PKAc), as well as the levels of the protein kinase C (PKC) second messenger, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3), were assessed in two anurans, the freeze-tolerant wood frog, Rana sylvatica, and the freeze-intolerant leopard frog, Rana pipiens.
Dehydration
of wood frogs resulted in a rapid elevation of liver cAMP and PKAc; cAMP was 3.4-fold greater than control values in animals that had lost 5% of total body water, whereas PKAc was elevated threefold in 20% dehydrated frogs. These results indicate protein kinase A mediation of the liver glycogenolysis and hyperglycemia that is induced by
dehydration
in this species. Skeletal muscle PKAc content also rose with
dehydration
but neither cAMP nor PKAc was affected by
dehydration
in leopard frog tissues. Anoxia exposure had different effects on signal transduction systems. PKAc was elevated after 1 h anoxia in R. sylvatica brain and was sustained over time but the enzyme was unaffected in other organs; by contrast, R. pipiens showed variable responses by PKAc to anoxia in three organs. Both species showed rapid (within 30 min) and large (3 to 7.8-fold) increases in IP3 in liver of anoxic frogs that decreased slowly with continued anoxia. IP3 also increased quickly in heart of anoxia-exposed wood frogs. This suggests that PKC may mediate various metabolic adjustments that promote hypoxia/anoxia resistance such as coordinating metabolic rate
depression
. A progressive rise in liver IP3 during
dehydration
in wood frogs (reaching fourfold higher than controls in 40% dehydrated animals) may also mediate similar hypoxia resistance adaptations under this stress since anurans experience progressive hypoxia due to increased blood viscosity when water loss reaches high values. The patterns of second messenger and PKAc changes in wood frog liver during
dehydration
closely parallel the changes seen in these same parameters during natural freezing suggesting that the freeze tolerance of selected terrestrially hibernating anurans may have evolved out of various anuran mechanisms of
dehydration
resistance.
...
PMID:Second messenger and cAMP-dependent protein kinase responses to dehydration and anoxia stresses in frogs. 920 70
We have previously demonstrated that acute third ventricle injections of both Pb2+ and Cd2+ impair the dipsogenic response elicited by three different situations:
dehydration
and central cholinergic or angiotensinergic stimulation. beta-Adrenergic activation is part of the multifactorial integrated systems operating in drinking behavior control in the central nervous system. In the present study acute third ventricle injections of Pb2+ (3, 30 and 300 pmol/rat) or Cd2+ (0.3, 3 and 30 pmol/ rat) blocked the dipsogenic response induced by third ventricle injections of isoproterenol (ISO; 160 nmol/rat) in a dose-dependent manner. Normohydrated animals receiving ISO + NaAc (sodium acetate) or saline (controls) displayed a high water intake after 120 min (ISO+saline = 5.78 +/- 0.54 ml/100 g; ISO+NaAc = 6.00 +/- 0.6 ml/100 g). After the same period, animals receiving ISO but pretreated with PbAc at the highest dose employed (300 pmol/rat) drank 0.78 +/- 0.23 ml/100 g while those receiving ISO and pretreated with the highest dose of CdCl2 (30 pmol/rat) presented a water intake of 0.7 +/- 0.30 ml/100 g. Third ventricle injections of CdCl2 (3 nmol/rat) or PbAc (3 nmol/rat) did not modify food intake in rats deprived of food for 24 h. Thus, general central nervous system
depression
explaining the antidipsogenic action of the metals can be safely excluded. It is concluded that both Pb2+ and Cd2+ inhibit water intake induced by central beta-adrenergic stimulation.
...
PMID:Lead (Pb2+) and cadmium (Cd2+) inhibit the dipsogenic action of central beta-adrenergic stimulation by isoproterenol. 924 42
From 1984 through 1992, staff at The Marine Mammal Center (TMMC, Sausalito, California, USA) examined 207 northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) with a condition of unknown etiology called northern elephant seal skin disease (NESSD). The skin lesions were characterized by patchy to extensive alopecia and hyperpigmentation, punctate or coalescing epidermal ulceration, and occasionally, massive skin necrosis. Microscopic lesions included ulcerative dermatitis with hyperkeratosis, squamous metaplasia and atrophy of sebaceous glands. All diseased seals were less than 2 years of age and suffered from emaciation,
depression
, and
dehydration
. Mortality from septicemia increased significantly with severity of skin ulceration. Compared to 14 apparently unaffected seals, diseased seals had depressed levels of circulating thyroxine, triiodothyronine, retinol, serum iron, albumin, calcium, and cholesterol. Levels of alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase, lactate dehydrogenase, gamma glutamyl transpeptidase, blood urea nitrogen, and uric acid were elevated. Morphometrically, diseased animals were approximately 15% smaller than normal seals of the same sage. Serum and blubber concentrations of 36 polychlorinated biphenyl congeners (sigma PCB) and dichloro-diphenyl-dichloroethylene (p,p'-DDE) were negatively correlated with body mass. Mean concentrations of sigma PCB and p,p'-DDE in serum in diseased seals were elevated as compared to apparently normal seals. Etiology of this syndrome remains unknown, but the possibility of PCB toxicosis cannot be ruled out.
...
PMID:Clinical and pathological characterization of northern elephant seal skin disease. 924 88
Chronic mild stress (CMS) exposes animals to unpredictable stressors. Reduced consumption of sucrose or saccharin solutions by CMS rats has been used as a putative measure of anhedonia, typical of
depression
. Our objective was to determine whether saccharin consumption and preference and suppression of exploratory and rearing behaviors in the open field were reliable indicators of CMS-induced behavioral
depression
. In Experiment 1, male Wistar rats subjected to 6 weeks of CMS consumed significantly less food and gained less weight than controls. CMS did not effect saccharin intake, or preference, measured in a two-bottle test with water. CMS rats exposed to a novel open field showed increased exploration and rearing. In a second test, performed immediately after a novel stress of restraint, there were no differences in exploratory or rearing behavior of CMS and control rats. In Experiment 2, CMS was reduced to 3 weeks and rats were single or group housed in their home cages. Open field activity of CMS rats was similar to that in Experiment 1. Saccharin preference of CMS rats was significantly suppressed when tested after 24 hours of water deprivation, but was not different from controls after 5 hours of water deprivation. In the final experiment Sprague Dawley rats behaved the same as Wistar rats in the CMS paradigm. Therefore, the CMS protocol used in these experiments did not induce behaviors indicative of
depression
but did cause a mild anorexia and weight loss. Saccharin intake of CMS rats was dependent upon their
dehydration
state and could not be attributed to stress-induced anhedonia.
...
PMID:Failure to change exploration or saccharin preference in rats exposed to chronic mild stress. 940 21
We report the cases of two patients with psychiatric stupor who developed venous thrombosis. A 29-year-old schizophrenic woman had been hospitalized in psychiatric institutions three times because of stupor associated with auditory hallucinations and thought blocking. These symptoms recurred and she was admitted to our hospital with deep venous thrombosis of her left leg. The other patient was a 67-year-old woman with
depression
. She had also suffered from insomnia. Following admission to our hospital, she developed a depressive stupor complicated by deep venous thrombosis of her left leg. Both cases were treated with sodium heparin and urokinase, and completely resolved. It is well known that
dehydration
, infection and decubitus ulcers are important physical complications of psychiatric stupor, but there have been few reports of deep venous thrombosis as a physical complication of stupor.
...
PMID:Deep venous thrombosis of the leg due to psychiatric stupor. 941 81
Depression
is a common clinical problem in the elderly. Risk factors in this population include genetic vulnerability, psychosocial losses, medical comorbidity, cerebrovascular disease, and neurodegenerative disorders.
Depression
in the elderly may have severe consequences, including high rates of suicide, malnutrition or
dehydration
, high utilization of medical services, impaired recovery from medical illnesses, and inappropriate placement in residential care facilities. A significant number of older depressed patients may not respond to anti-depressant medications, suffer intolerable medication side effects, or have illnesses with symptoms or consequences so severe that it is not feasible to wait the time required for one or more antidepressant trials to work. For many of these patients ECT can be a dramatically effective treatment. With appropriate evaluation and monitoring, ECT can be performed with relative safety even for patients with serious concurrent medical illnesses. Serious adverse effects are rare, and cognitive consequences of ECT are generally circumscribed and of limited duration; there is no evidence of "brain damage" or permanent change in cognitive ability from ECT. After a recovery period memory function is often better than it was during the episode of
depression
. For patients who have been refractory to or intolerant of medication, maintenance ECT can be an effective strategy for preventing early relapse. Further research is needed, however, to clarify the optimum use of MECT schedules and pharmacotherapy combinations to most effectively and safely prevent relapse of
depression
in different elderly populations and to help predict who will best respond to which treatment modalities.
...
PMID:ECT in the elderly. 952 May 27
Exhaustion occurs in most equestrian sports, but it is more frequent in events that require sustained endurance work such as endurance racing, three-day eventing, trial riding, and hunting. Exhaustion is also more likely when an unfit, unacclimatized, or unsound horse is exercised. Mechanisms that contribute to exhaustion include heat retention, fluid and electrolyte loss, acid-base imbalance, and intramuscular glycogen depletion. Clinical signs include elevated temperature, pulse, and respiratory rate;
depression
; anorexia; unwillingness to continue to exercise;
dehydration
; weakness; stiffness; hypovolemic shock; exertional myopathy; synchronous diaphragmatic flutter; atrial fibrillation; diarrhea; colic; and laminitis. Treatment includes stopping exercise; rapid cooling; rapid large volume intravenous or oral fluid administration; and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug administration.
...
PMID:The exhausted horse syndrome. 956 96
Hyperparathyroidism is a common cause of hypercalcemia. The hypercalcemia usually is discovered during a routine serum chemistry profile. Often, there has been no previous suspicion of this disorder. In most patients initially believed to be asymptomatic, previously unrecognized symptoms resolve with surgical correction of the disorder. The symptoms of hyperparathyroidism are vague and often similar to symptoms of
depression
, irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia or stress reaction. Complications of primary hyperparathyroidism include peptic ulcers, nephrolithiasis, pancreatitis and
dehydration
. Surgical management is usually indicated. When medical management is used, routine monitoring for clinical deterioration is recommended. Preoperative localization of adenomas with technetium Tc 99m sestamibi scan is possible but may be unnecessary. An experienced surgeon should perform the parathyroidectomy.
...
PMID:Hyperparathyroidism. 957 20
Sixteen cases of acute idiopathic toxaemic colitis developed in a veterinary hospital over a period of three years. Before the onset of colitis, 15 horses had received antibiotics, 11 had undergone general anaesthesia and various surgical procedures, and 10 had been treated with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The horses had acute onset, profuse watery diarrhoea, profound
depression
, mild to moderate abdominal pain, reduced intestinal borborygmi, tachycardia,
dehydration
and endotoxic shock. Leucopenia, neutropenia and pyrexia were common early indicators of impending colitis. Metronidazole appeared to be an effective treatment; eight horses treated with metronidazole survived whereas five of seven horses that received other treatments, but no metronidazole, died or had to be euthanased. The aetiology of the colitis could not be determined, but the clinicopathological features resembled those of colitis attributed to an intestinal overgrowth of Clostridium perfringens type A. No Salmonella species were isolated from 52 samples of faeces, colonic contents and colonic mucosa which were collected from the horses antemortem and postmortem.
...
PMID:Use of metronidazole in equine acute idiopathic toxaemic colitis. 967 Apr 51
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