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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Obesity is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. However, a direct link between these two states is difficult to establish, since obesity frequently occurs with other disease states such as
diabetes
, hypertension and atherosclerosis. Clinical studies have clearly shown that uncorrected obesity is associated with cardiac hypertrophy and compromised ventricular function. A number of rodent models of obesity have been studied in terms of cardiovascular adaptations. Cardiac function of the obese Zucker rat appears to be normal at a younger age. Only after several months is
depression
in cardiac function discernable. These animals are mildly hypertensive, but do not exhibit the characteristic increase in cardiac output associated with human obesity. A unique characteristic of JCR:LA-cp rat is that they develop atherosclerotic and myocardial lesions. Hearts from these animals will maintain normal function when perfused with physiological levels of calcium. At higher calcium concentrations, however, mechanical function becomes impaired. Dietary-induced obese rats exhibit many of the hemodynamic alterations associated with human obesity, but there is no evidence to-date that these animals will develop severe cardiac
depression
. Short-term weight reduction apparently has beneficial cardiovascular effects, but weight cycling may be harmful. Given the widespread occurrence of obesity, further studies are warranted to characterize the cardiac manifestations of this condition.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular abnormalities associated with human and rodent obesity. 143 63
The aim of this paper is to assess the influence of selected psychosocial factors as predictors of stroke incidence in a probability sample of noninstitutionalized elderly. The main psychosocial factor of interest was
depression
. Marital status, social support, social networks, and religiousness were also assessed as potential antecedent or mediating factors. The data were obtained from a prospective longitudinal study based on 2,812 individuals aged 65 years and over living in New Haven, Connecticut. The incidence of stroke was monitored from the baseline interview in 1982 until December 1988.
Depression
, measured by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression
Scale (CES-D), was measured at baseline as were other predictor variables. Univariate Cox regression analyses revealed that higher CES-D scores were predictive of greater stroke incidence (p < 0.05). More frequent attendance at religious services was associated with lower incidence (p < 0.001). CES-D scores were also correlated with many measures of sociodemographic, health, and physical function factors in our multivariate analysis (p < 0.05). When combined with other significant predictor variables such as age, sex, hypertension,
diabetes
, physical function, and smoking, neither
depression
nor religious attendance retained its significance.
...
PMID:Depressive symptoms and other psychosocial factors as predictors of stroke in the elderly. 144 54
A quantitative analysis of the molecular weight (MW) profile of urinary protein by SDS-PAGE was performed in streptozotocin (STZ)-injected, non-ketotic diabetic rats (DM group), diabetic rats receiving dipyridamole (DM-DIP group), normal rats (C group) and STZ-injected rats with near-normal glycemia due to insulin treatment (DM-INSULIN group). In the DM group, decrease of a small MW protein (SMWP) (MW 19.5 k) was found at 2.5 weeks, and an increase of larger MW proteins (LMWP) (MW 68 [albumin], 55 and 29 k) together with a decrease of SMWPs (MW 19.5 and 15 k) was found at 15 weeks, as compared to the C group: the MW profile of urinary protein in the DM-INSULIN and C groups was indistinguishable. At 15 weeks, creatinine clearance (Ccr) was significantly depressed and an increase in the mesangial matrix with electron dense deposits was evident in the DM group. The urinary protein abnormalities were partially corrected and the reduction of Ccr was absent in the DM-DIP group with no effect on glomerular morphology. STZ-induced
diabetes
in rats is accompanied by a reduction of urinary SMWP, and a subsequent increase of LMWP and
depression
of Ccr: dipyridamole ameliorates urinary protein abnormalities and prevents the reduction of Ccr.
Diabetes
Res Clin Pract 1992 Oct
PMID:Abnormal molecular weight profile of urinary protein in rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes. 144 72
Depression
in
diabetes
is a prevalent and chronic condition. The etiology is unknown but is probably complex; and biological, genetic, and psychological factors remain as potential contributors. Several neuroendocrine and neurotransmitter abnormalities common to both
depression
and
diabetes
have been identified, adding to etiological speculations. Pharmacotherapy of
depression
may improve both mood and glucose regulation in
diabetes
, although controlled studies of the efficacy of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy for
depression
in
diabetes
are not yet available.
Depression
has potential interactions with
diabetes
on multiple levels and remains an important clinical focus independent of the medical disease.
Diabetes
Care 1992 Nov
PMID:Depression in adults with diabetes. 1097 57
The hypothalamus, in addition to regulating the anterior and posterior pituitary, controls water balance through thirst, regulates food ingestion and body temperature, influences consciousness, sleep, emotion and other behaviors. Much has been learned of these effects in human disease through the clinical manifestations that occur with hypothalamic lesions. This study reviews the clinical pathologic correlations that have been made in recent years showing that regions of the hypothalamus exert functions in humans that are similar to those identified in experimental animals. Clinical pathologic correlations have not always provided precise analysis of hypothalamic function. The hypothalamus is small and often lesions that come to clinical attention achieve considerable size before their recognition, making local anatomic dissections of the effects of the lesions difficult. Nevertheless, the use of modern non-invasive techniques including CT scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) have provided new information not previously available. This paper reviews several cases of hypothalamic disorder recognized recently. (1) A 33-year-old black man with hypothalamic sarcoidosis. Manifestations of hypothalamic dysfunction included panhypopituitarism, aggressive hyperphagia, polydipsia (partially due to hyperglycemia secondary to
diabetes mellitus
), drowsiness,
depression
, and irritability. (2) A 37-year-old woman with a large intrahypothalamic tumor (biopsy showed pituitary adenoma), with drowsiness, poikilothermia, lack of satiety, confusion, and memory loss. She becomes depressed when she is transiently more alert (as after hypertonic contrast-dye infusion). (3) A 60-year-old man with hypothalamic compression by a pituitary tumor, associated with syndrome of inappropriate ADH (SIADH), severe anorexia, memory loss, but preserved thirst. After surgical decompression of the tumor his appetite acutely recovered, but he developed severe hypo(poikilo)thermia. (4) A 45-year-old woman with a suprasellar craniopharyngioma presented with severe drowsiness, hyperphagia,
depression
, and memory loss post-operatively, which responded to antidepressants (except for the memory loss). She had extremely labile blood pressures and serum Na for about 1 week post-operatively.
...
PMID:Neurologic manifestations of hypothalamic disease. 148 Jul 55
A consecutive series of 30 patients 75 years of age and older who underwent isolated coronary artery bypass graftings during a 6 year period (from 1985 to 1990) was analyzed. This group was compared with a consecutive series of 512 patients under the age of 75 who underwent the same procedure during the same period. The elderly patients had a higher incidence of unstable angina pectoris, left main or triple vessel disease and
depression
of ejection fraction. There were no deaths in the hospital or within 30 days of operation (0%), but postoperative complication occurred in 26 cases (86.7%) in the elderly patients. Mean postoperative hospital stay was longer in the elderly patients than the younger ones (21.7 +/- 8.7 days, 18.9 +/- 5.9 days, respectively). The factors frequently noted in the elderly cases with major complications were emergency or urgent operation, history of congestive heart failure and
diabetes
. The factors associated with prolonged postoperative hospital stay in elderly cases were octogenarians, intraoperative blood transfusion, wound complications, perioperative myocardial infarction, pulmonary failure and low cardiac output state. It is concluded that CABG can be performed safely even in elderly patients by the proper postoperative management, in spite of having increased postoperative complications and resulting in a prolonged postoperative hospital stay.
...
PMID:[Morbidity and mortality of coronary artery bypass surgery in patients 75 years of age or older]. 148 30
Forms of coping with
diabetes
were determined on the basis of self-ratings of emotions (depressive, sad, angry, anxious) and responses on a 30-item "stages of grief" questionnaire by 52 inpatients aged between 25 and 50 (
diabetes
duration 1 to 35 years) at the beginning of a 12 day
diabetes
education program. Psychometric qualities of the instruments were evaluated. To test empirically the notion of grief stages in coping with
diabetes
, the frequency of emphasis on one or more emotional areas or stages of grief was determined and tested to ascertain whether various conditions occurred more frequently than was expected by chance. Results indicated that shortly after
diabetes
manifestation scores on protest and
depression
with respect to
diabetes
were elevated. The majority of cases could not be assigned to a single emotion or stage of grief but displayed negative emotional reactions in different content areas simultaneously. Consequently the concept of grief stages for coping with
diabetes
as well as recommendations based on this concept are questioned.
...
PMID:[Stages of grief in coping with diabetes?]. 149 24
The objective of this research was to explore the relationship of psychosocial variables to management and control of insulin-dependent
diabetes
, as measured by a scale of reported behavioral adherence and by glycosylated hemoglobin, respectively. The method includes a relatively large sample (127 subjects) drawn from a clinic, a broad range of psychosocial variables (
depression
, anxiety, family process, health locus of control), and documented reliability and validity of psychosocial measurement (alpha coefficients ranging from .63 to .95). The results show that both anxiety and
depression
have weak positive correlations with blood sugar. Family process variables also are weakly correlated with blood sugar. The measure of behavioral adherence is moderately correlated with blood sugar. The life stage of the diabetic appears to affect these relationships markedly. The conclusion is that there is no broad strong association of psychosocial variables with blood sugar but that there may be subgroups of diabetics, especially adolescents with recent onset, for whom the relationships may be more powerful.
...
PMID:Psychosocial and psychopathologic influences on management and control of insulin-dependent diabetes. 151 18
Over the past decade we have seen a shift in the strategy for the treatment of hypertension, from stepped therapy--involving a highly structured, unvarying series of steps--to recommendations for more individualized treatment. How shall we accomplish that goal? Severe hypertension provides a clear indication to bypass earlier recommendations. Demographic data such as age, gender, and race, often cited, have proved less helpful. Concomitant medical problems, which are found in greater than 50% of hypertensive patients, are most often the crucial determinants in the selection of antihypertensive therapy. Concurrent coronary artery disease,
diabetes mellitus
, heart failure, azotemia, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, borderline cognitive dysfunction, anxiety, and
depression
are all common. Each has implications for antihypertensive therapy. Moreover, blood pressure reduction is a surrogate for our real goal, which is reduction of cardiovascular risk. Thus, consideration of concomitant medical problems has extended to left ventricular hypertrophy, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and insulin resistance as additional risk factors in hypertension. Consideration of all of these factors makes it possible to individualize antihypertensive therapy in most patients.
...
PMID:Evolution of the treatment of hypertension: what really matters in the 1990s? 151 35
Two multivariate methods, a logistic regression-derived algorithm and a Bayesian independence-assuming method (CADENZA), were compared concerning their abilities to estimate posttest probability of coronary disease in patients with suspected coronary disease. All patients underwent exercise testing within 3 months prior to coronary angiography. Coronary disease was defined as the presence of one or more vessels with greater than or equal to 50% luminal diameter narrowing. A group of 300 patients (disease prevalence = 37%) was used to derive the algorithm. Another group of 950 patients was used to validate the algorithm and compare it to CADENZA. Seven variables (age, sex, symptoms,
diabetes
, mm ST
depression
, ST slope, and peak heart rate) were used to generate posttest probabilities for each method. The receiver operating characteristic curve area for the logistic regression method (0.81 +/- 0.01) was significantly higher than CADENZA (0.75 +/- 0.01; p less than 0.05). There was, however, no difference in the calibration of the two methods. When given equivalent variable information, the logistic regression algorithm had better discrimination than CADENZA for estimating the probability of coronary disease following exercise electrocardiography.
...
PMID:Comparison of logistic regression and Bayesian-based algorithms to estimate posttest probability in patients with suspected coronary artery disease undergoing exercise ECG. 152 2
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