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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eighty-two women, presenting as normal-weight bulimics, obese binge eaters, social phobics, and individuals with panic disorder, were compared on anxiety,
depression
, and substance abuse. All were administered the Anxiety Disorder Interview Schedule-Revised and completed the Michigan Alcohol Screening Test,
Drug Abuse
Screening Test, and Self-Consciousness Scale. A striking proportion of eating disorder subjects were comorbid for one or more anxiety disorders, the most frequent diagnoses being generalized anxiety disorder and social phobia. The results suggest that the place of anxiety in bulimia nervosa goes beyond that discussed within the context of the anxiety reduction model. Conflicting comorbidity findings among this and prior investigations are noted, however, and discussed in terms of the issue of differential diagnosis between eating and anxiety disorders.
...
PMID:Comparison of bulimics, obese binge eaters, social phobics, and individuals with panic disorder on comorbidity across DSM-III-R anxiety disorders. 143 Jun 7
We report on a 32-year old woman with bulimia nervosa treated with fluoxetine for
depression
. Fluoxetine is the only drug currently recommended for the treatment of bulimia. The patient became severely disturbed with tension, irritability, self-damage by cutting and violent, intense, suicidal and paranoid ideation qualitatively different to previous symptoms in the course of her illness. Clinical impression was of a striking association between fluoxetine and these symptoms. We suggest caution when using fluoxetine in bulimic patients with
depression
who have additional impulsive behaviours such as self-cutting, alcohol and/or
drug abuse
and shop-lifting.
...
PMID:Severe disturbance occurring during treatment for depression of a bulimic patient with fluoxetine. 146 Jan 71
Nineteen of 42 (45.2%) patients were socially phobic when and only when depressed. Each of these patients met diagnostic criteria for primary
depression
(Research Diagnostic Criteria) and major depression (DSM-III-R). Every subject had three or more distinct episodes of
depression
. Eight of the 9 men (88.9%) and 11 of the 33 women (33.3%) were socially phobic when depressed (p = 0.004). Patients with recurrent wintertime episodes of major depression (p = 0.036) and a past history of alcohol or
drug abuse
were more likely to be socially phobic (p = 0.0001). The authors suggest the 19 socially phobic patients with primary
depression
should be regarded as having secondary social phobia. Secondary social phobia may be an important source of comorbidity in patients with primary
depression
.
...
PMID:Secondary social phobia in patients with major depression. 146 45
In a large multicenter effort, major depressives were systematically studied at index admission and prospectively followed up for 5 years. Primary unipolar depressives with a family history of alcoholism (
depression
spectrum disease) differ from depressives with a family history of
depression
only (familial pure depressive disease) in having more familial anxiety and somatization disorder, more divorce, more suicide attempts, more negative life events, and needed more time to recover from the index episode. In the 5-year follow-up they are more likely to develop alcoholism and
drug abuse
. Depressive spectrum disease patients are more likely to meet systematic criteria for neurotic depression. The data suggest that major depression is a syndrome that is heterogeneous, and may be a final common pathway of more than one familial illnesses.
...
PMID:Familial subtypes of unipolar depression: a prospective study of familial pure depressive disease compared to depression spectrum disease. 146 81
Psychiatric disorders are studied in a 94 drug addict population using structured interviews. Beck
Depression
Inventory and DSM-III and CIE-9 criteria for diagnosis. Fifty five percent of drug abusers have a psychiatric disorder not related with
drug abuse
. Personality disorders and affective disorders are the most frequent diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Psychopathology associated with drug consumption]. 152 48
Many studies of age-related cognitive decline have failed to distinguish between usual and successful aging. Although some degree of cognitive impairment is associated with aging, when one looks at average performance, there is great variability among individuals, with many showing little or no deleterious effects of aging on intellectual abilities. Many of the risk factors for dementia and for conditions associated with cognitive impairments can be treated or controlled. Among the preventable causes of cognitive decline are the following: AIDS, Alcohol and
drug abuse
, Cerebrovascular disease, Exposure to organic solvents or lead, Head trauma, Overmedication, Syphilis. Other conditions that may cause cognitive decline can be controlled or treated: Atherosclerosis,
Depression
, Diabetes, Emphysema, High blood pressure, Obesity, Sleep disorders, Thyroid dysfunction. In addition, it may be possible to enhance the cognitive performance of even healthy elderly people through changes in diet and lifestyle. Recent data raise the possibility that improved prenatal and perinatal care and greater access to educational opportunities may result in a decreased incidence of dementia in future generations of older adults. Although they are rapidly becoming more numerous, the efficacy of cognitive training programs in preventing or slowing cognitive decline has not yet been demonstrated. Nevertheless, such programs may ameliorate cognitive impairment by reducing the psychiatric disabilities associated with anxiety and
depression
. The general principle underlying these strategies for limiting cognitive impairment with age is to maximize brain reserve and minimize brain damage.
...
PMID:Preventing cognitive decline. 157 76
This paper explores how symptoms of mental health problems influence acquired immune deficiency syndrome-related risk behaviors, and how changes in those symptoms relate to risk behaviors engaged in by young adults. Repeated interviews with 602 youths since 1984 provide a history of change in behaviors. Mental health symptoms during adolescence (alcohol/drug [r = .28]; conduct disorder [r = .27];
depression
[r = .16]; suicide [r = .14]; anxiety [r = .16]; and posttraumatic stress [r = .09]) are associated with higher numbers of risk behaviors (specifically, prostitution, use of intravenous drugs, and choice of a high-risk sex partner) during young adulthood. Changes in mental health symptoms between adolescence and young adulthood are related to the number of risk behaviors engaged in by young adulthood (total number of symptoms [B = .10], alcohol/
drug abuse
or dependence [B = .34],
depression
[B = .20], suicidality [B = .35], anxiety [B = .13], and posttraumatic stress [B = .14]). Changes in symptoms of mental health problems are associated specifically with those risk behaviors that are initiated primarily in young adulthood: intravenous drug use, prostitution, and choice of risky partners. The findings show that prevention and treatment of mental health problems are important components of preventive interventions for human immunodeficiency virus infection in high-risk teens and young adults.
...
PMID:The influence of mental health problems on AIDS-related risk behaviors in young adults. 158 74
The rate of suicide following spinal cord injury has not been extensively studied but appears to be greater than in the general population. Six patients who died by suicide, from a total of 342 patients who were treated for acute spinal cord injury over a 5 year period are described. Clinical features shared by this group of patients included being male; having schizoid, depressive or narcissistic personality traits; alcohol or
drug abuse
; family or significant others favouring death as a preferred option; and the development of significant
depression
.
...
PMID:Suicide following acute traumatic spinal cord injury. 163 Aug 43
The aim of the present study was to see if female alcoholics had low platelet MAO activity and whether there was a correlation between low MAO activity in female alcoholics and specific clinical characteristics often observed in type II male alcoholics. In earlier studies, male alcoholics have been subdivided into type I and type II alcoholics. Type II alcoholics were characterized by early onset, a high frequency of
depression
and alcoholism in first degree relatives, a high frequency of
drug abuse
and social complications, sensation seeking behavior, extraversion, impulsive sensation seeking psychopathy, and low platelet MAO activity. In the present series it was demonstrated that the female alcoholics had significantly lower platelet MAO activities than the female healthy volunteers. The subgroup of female alcoholics with low platelet MAO activity, however, did not differ from female alcoholics with normal platelet MAO activity in the same way as male alcoholics with low platelet MAO activity have been shown to differ from male alcoholics with normal platelet activity. They did not have early onset, higher frequency of
depression
or alcoholism in their first degree relatives, nor more social complications than the female alcoholics with normal platelet MAO activity. Furthermore, they did not differ from the female alcoholics with normal platelet MAO activity in any personality trait covered by the Karolinska Scales of Personality (KSP).
...
PMID:Clinical characteristics of female alcoholics with low platelet monoamine oxidase activity. 169 77
A differentiation between the normal sensation of tiredness and the symptom "fatigue" is often difficult. Both are influenced by cultural, social, psychological and biological factors, which can lead--interactively--to symptom formation. Psychiatric disorders frequently associated with fatigue are all forms of
depression
, somatization and anxiety disorders, chronic pain states and
drug abuse
among many others. In at least 2/3 of patients with the fashionable chronic fatigue syndrome--formerly called neurasthenia--a psychiatric diagnosis can be made, most of them also suffer from many symptoms attributes to the autonomous nervous system. The clinical approach should be cautious avoiding diagnostic and therapeutic overaction and therapy should emerge from a diagnosis properly assessed.
...
PMID:[Intense fatigue in humans. Psychosocial and cultural aspects]. 175 73
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